EVOLVE 133

August 24, 2019 – Livonia, Michigan

Arturo Ruas def. Stephen Wolf
This was my first time seeing Wolf, and he looked alright here for the most part. The match had some peculiar flow issues, but all the action was well-executed. I was especially impressed with how seamlessly these guys recovered from a botched standing shooting star press spot. Ruas won with an armbar out of nowhere after a pretty short match, and I’m hoping he’s saving his energy for something more special tomorrow against Anthony Henry. **½ 

Kushida def. JD Drake
This took a little while to get moving out of the gate. Once they settled into the story of Kushida seeing Drake as a canvas to show off his strength and Drake doing what he could to take advantage of Kushida’s narrow goal to gain the advantage it picked up in a big way. Kushida is really good, which both helped cover some of Drake’s more indy tendencies but at the same time exposed how much more polished he is than the big guy. He won with the Sakuraba lock. After the match, a masked man comes out and immediately reveals himself to be Alex Shelley, Kushida’s NJPW tag partner. Kushida seems genuinely surprised and they bro out in a cute moment. Shelley makes a point about his promo being unscripted, so I’m impressed he didn’t make any jokes about Jews. He say he’s not in EVOLVE, he’s just there to surprise Kushida while he was near his home. That was a memorable moment in a promotion not known for them. ***¼ 

Anthony Henry def. Austin Theory
Theory signed with WWE about a week before this and appeared at Takeover: Toronto in the crowd, so his matches all get reviewed from here on out. Before the match, Henry recognized that the title wasn’t on the line but he demanded that Theory shake his hand if he lost. Theory said Henry would have to kiss his boots if he lost. None of this seemed official, despite Lenny Leonard trying to sell it as such. This started out stiff and quick. Theory caught Henry’s leg and then targeted it for what felt like a very long time. Henry’s selling during his comeback was spotty, but the action was flashy at least. It’s annoying that a massive chunk of the match was devoted to something that didn’t consistently matter. With better selling this would have been fantastic, but as it is it was simply very watchable. I will give them credit for sneaking in legwork on Theory and then having that be the key to Henry’s victory, even if that didn’t make Henry’s inconsistent performance any less distracting. Henry won in 12:48 with a Cloverleaf Muffler. Theory shakes Henry’s hand after the match, but Henry never got a championship match as a result of this. ***¼

Matt Riddle def. Josh Briggs
Briggs isn’t wearing the sling anymore, making him look significantly less cool. He does tower over Riddle, which makes me feel like his WWE contract is inevitable. Riddle gets cute and hits a Jackhammer, playing off the crowd’s obsession with the Goldberg issue. This was more one-sided than I expected, though it did show what Riddle can do against bigger guys. Riddle won when Briggs passed out in the Bromission. I was expecting to see a little more from Briggs here, but I can never get too mad at the Matt Riddle show. Between Riddle going over clean here and Curt Stallion sort of turning heel earlier in the show (planting the seed of a story that could lead to them losing their tag title match the following night) I have a feeling this will (sadly) be a Killian Dain-free weekend. ***¼