Respect is Earned
May 12, 2007
PPV #1
BJ Whitmer opens up the very first PPV. He puts over how ROH is a company built on letting the wrestling do the talking. He challenges anyone to fight him right now.
Takeshi Morishima (c) vs BJ Whitmer - ROH World Title
A competitive three minute match built around making Morishima look like an unstoppable monster. While Whitmer does get in a lot of offense to keep him from looking like a jobber, they're careful to make sure that Morishima is never in trouble. After a few hopeless nearfalls by Whitmer, Morishima eats him alive and beats him with a backdrop driver to retain the belt. Morishima's unstoppable and Whitmer's a loveable loser.
2 Stars.
After the match, Nigel McGuinness hits the ring and demands to have the next crack at Morishima's ROH World Title. That brings out Bryan Danielson. Danielson lists some of the men he successfully defended the ROH Title against during his fifteen month reign, including Nigel. A fight breaks out between Danielson and Nigel with Morishima eventually taking Danielson's side in the two-on-one beat down of Nigel. With Morishima distracted with Nigel, Danielson picks up the ROH World Title. Morishima eventually rips the title out of Danielson's hands and leaves. We're only ten minutes into the PPV and we already have three huge future matches set-up (Danielson vs Nigel, Nigel vs Morishima and Morishima vs Danielson).
A vignette for Brent Albright airs. Albright plans on making money by being a gun for hire.
Rocky Romero vs Naomichi Marufuji
Rocky is representing the No Remorse Corps. The early going is built around Rocky working over the arm of Marufuji. From there it shifts to Marufuji spending a lot of time working over the knee of Romero. Romero's selling was pretty damn good while it was happening. It does make for an unusual match layout as the heel (Romero) is basically in the babyface role. Both guys forget about their injuries to give the fans the exciting finishing stretch. Marufuji ends up winning with the Shiranui. The positive to the finishing move is that the commentators were hyping it earlier in the match. So it's a good way to establish that it's Marufuji's top move. The problem is that all of that leg work was without purpose. These issues kept the match from being great, still it's a rather good showing despite the flaws.
3 Stars.
In the back, Larry Sweeney and trainer, Tank Toland, cuts a promo introducing his newest client, Sara Del Rey. Sweeney puts over his full Sweet and Sour Inc faction. Toland promises to transform Bobby Dempsey into a Greek God. Good luck with that, Tank.
Back to the ring and we're in the middle of a fight with Morishima and Danielson once again beating down McGuinness. KENTA makes the save for Nigel. KENTA and Nigel works together to clear the ring.
The Briscoes (c) vs Claudio Castagnoli and Matt Sydal - ROH Tag Titles
How to ruin a great story 101. I thought the first half was great. Everything was built around tag team wrestling. The Briscoes controlled most of that half because of their experience together, quick tags and a lot of double team moves. As good as Claudio and Sydal were, they were just out their league in dealing with these tag team experts. It's around the 10-12 minute mark that they tease a finish with Claudio sent flying out of the ring and Sydal left to take one big move after another. This is where things go downhill. They spent the second half of the match just having this long finishing stretch. There was one kick out after another. All stories of "This is what tag team pro wrestling is all about" is killed off since there isn't any team work. The selling wasn't there and it broke down into a spotfest. Maybe I have an incorrect opinion though as the crowd seemed to love it. I thought what they had going in the first half was better. The one redeeming element of having so many kick outs is that it established the Briscoes' Doomsday Device as a top move that can finish anyone off.
3 1/4 Stars.
After the commentators hype ROH and plug some upcoming shows, Kevin Steen and El Generico interrupt. Steen wants to know when he and Generico will get their ROH Tag Titles shot. This ends up creating a huge brawl between Steenerico and The Briscoes. Good way to set-up The Briscoe's next title defense.
Roderick Strong vs Delirious
A feud that was started at the Fifth Year Festival: Philly after Strong gave Delirious a concussion and then delivered a Gibson Driver on the steel barricade. This is their first singles match since then. Despite the obvious grudge match expectations, you wouldn't have known it was supposed to be one had you watched the match on mute. Neither guy really did anything to play into Delirious' injury. Instead, they worked a normal match with Strong working over the back of Delirious and Delirious trying anything and everything to get the upset. In the end, it doesn't matter as Strong's just too good for Delirious and he wins following a Sick Kick/Gibson Driver combo. Good indy dream match type showdown, but where's the hatred?
3 1/4 Stars.
After the match, the No Remorse Corps (Rocky Romero and Davey Richards) brings out a steel barricade and set it up between the ring and steel railing. Once again, Strong hits the Gibson Driver on the barricade. Despite being late to the party, Resilience member, Erick Stevens, runs out and takes out each member of the NRC. Good feud transition segment.
Adam Pearce cuts a promo hyping Ring of Honor and all of BJ Whitmer sacrifices. Pearce believes Whitmer will never forget that he lost in the very first ROH PPV match. A tease that Pearce could be the savior Whitmer is looking for.
Takeshi Morishima and Bryan Danielson vs KENTA and Nigel McGuinness
A perfect way to conclude the first PPV. Nigel ended up playing the face-in-peril for a good amount in the first half. Undoubtedly, the best sequence was later on with Nigel doing everything he can to inflict some sort of damage on Morishima. Despite good performances by Morishima, Danielson and KENTA, this was the Nigel McGuinness showcase. Near the end, he hit a huge dive to the outside into the fans onto Morishima. That ends up injuring his elbow. Rather than just leaving, Nigel had the ROH trainer wrap up his elbow and Nigel went right back into the ring. With the look of pure grimace, Nigel sucked it up and hit one last slingshot lariat on Morishima, sacrificing his own elbow in order to help KENTA win. It ends up failing. With Danielson trapping KENTA in the Cattle Mutilation, Morishima destroys Nigel's arm to keep him occupied. KENTA's forced to tap out, giving Danielson a rare win over KENTA (I believe only his second loss in ROH). Way better than the other tag match on the show. The match had a story, it flowed nicely, the finisher overkill only occurred when it should have, one guy came out looking like a star (Even in defeat) and you even had Morishima/Danielson showing some rather good tag team chemistry. A tag team MOTYC.
4 1/4 Stars.
After the match, Danielson makes the mistake of picking up the ROH World Title for the second time tonight. Morishima delivers a backdrop driver on his former partner. Being a good sport, Nigel picks up the title and goes to hand it to Morishima. Nigel: "This is your belt *Hands title to Morishima*. I'm going to win...*Morishima lariats the hell out of Nigel*" Awesomeness.
Overall
Back in the day, the biggest criticism mainstream fans had of ROH was that it didn't feature any storylines or feuds. That's a complete lie and this show proves that. Look at what has been set-up during the show: Nigel vs Morishima, Nigel vs Danielson, Danielson vs Morishima, Steenerico vs Briscoes, Erick Stevens (And Resilience) vs NRC and the initial hint of a possible union between Adam Pearce and BJ Whitmer. In addition, you still have Delirious vs NRC and Whitmer's run of bad luck stories going on at the same time. For a company that didn't use storylines, that's a hell of a lot. Star ratings wise, I don't feel as if the show holds up as well as it was initially received. Looking back at old reviews of the show, everyone seems to think every match (Sans main event) as being better than I felt they were. In some ways, my opinion is wrong. For 2007, these were the sort of matches that the ROH wanted to see. So maybe I don't feel as if the Briscoe's overkill style holds up too well in 2012, it doesn't matter. For 2007, it worked. Even with the weaker star ratings, this PPV was still a huge hit. Looking back, ROH picked the right time of the year to debut on PPV. By July (When it originally aired), the WWE was settling into it's uneventful post-Wrestlemania time of the year and TNA had already gone to shit. So if you wanted to see a great PPV in the summer of 2007, you bought ROH's 10 dollar show. For a company that had just lost Samoa Joe, Homicide, Austin Aries and Colt Cabana, they didn't let it hurt their star power during this two hour PPV. Personally, I feel ROH works a lot better at 2 hours instead of 3+ hours.