ROH: New Beginnings

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Honor is about to be restored to professional wrestling.

In an era where spectacle has eclipsed sport, a new battleground is rising from the independent scene — a place where respect, athleticism, and pure competition come before egos and politics. On this stage, the best wrestlers from across the globe will collide: veterans hungry to prove they still belong, hungry newcomers ready to steal the spotlight, and dream match-ups that fans thought they’d never see.

This is Ring of Honor — where every handshake is a promise, every match is a test, and every victory must be earned.
 

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|| MALE ROSTER ||
AJ Styles, Bryan Danielson, Christian York, Christopher Daniels, Doug Williams, Jerry Lynn, Joel Maximo, Joey Matthews, Jose Maximo, Konnan, Low Ki, Mikey Whipwreck, Nova, Samoa Joe, Steve Corino

|| MALE TAG TEAMS ||
Bad Street Boys (Joey Matthews & Christian York) | Mikey Whipwreck & Konnan | SAT (Jose & Joel Maximo)

|| FEMALE ROSTER ||
Allison Danger, Mercedes Martinez, Mickie Knuckles & Sara Del Rey
 
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Champion​
Date​
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Notes​
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1st​
0​


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Champion​
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0​
 
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On the 23rd February, Ring of Honor will host it's premier event 'Welcome Player One' live from the Murphy Recreation Center (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania). With the promotion's owner Rob Feinstein making it known that the intention at this point will be for ROH to host a live event once a month, with the purpose of seeking a television deal for weekly broadcasts. A total of four matches were announced in order to tempt fans to attend the show:

Jerry Lynn vs. AJ Styles


Bryan Danielson vs. Doug Williams

Samoa Joe vs. Low Ki

Christopher Daniels vs. Steve Corino

There was also a promise made by Feinstein that the promotion would endeavor to create a strong female talent pool and that women were more than just a novelty but would at times be the main focus.
 

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The first show in the history of Ring of Honor would begin with a four way dance featuring four Cruiserweights who had previously been part of World Championship Wrestling. Evan Karagias, Kaz Hayashi, Super Calo and Juventud Gurrerrera would all earn the right of taking part in the first ever match in the company's history.


- Match One - Cruiserweight Sprint -
| Super Calo vs. Kaz Hayashi vs. Evan Karagias vs. Juventud Gurrerrera |

All four cruiserweights exploded out of the gate with lightning-quick exchanges and constant counters. The action never slowed, with shifting alliances and rapid near-falls keeping everyone alive. Juvi’s springboard dropkick rocked Calo, Kaz caught Karagias in a crisp tilt-a-whirl backbreaker, and Calo soared with a twisting tope onto all three men. In the closing scramble, Juvi went for the Juvi Driver, but Kaz slipped free, drilled Karagias with a sharp spin kick, and snatched a tight cradle. Before Juvi or Calo could make the save, the referee counted three; Kaz Hayashi snatching victory in a four-way sprint.

Winner: Kaz Hayashi

* * *

Shane Douglas would appear in the ring with a vest top with two words written on the front of it 'Fuck Vince' a clear indication of Douglas' feelings towards Vince McMahon and the WWF following the closure of World Championship Wrestling. Douglas would make it known that he fully intended on making his Ring of Honor debut in the coming months but that he would be watching from the sidelines for now. Scouting out an opponent that was worthy of his time and effort. Douglas would confirm that he intended to make his debut in the summer, so if Feinstein had any sense he would booking some serious talent that would give the fans what they wanted. A Franchise debut that would be star studded and guarantee that seats be filled in perpetuity as long as his name was on the billing.

* * *


- Match Two - Tag Team Match -
| The SAT (Jose & Joel Maximo) vs. Mikey Whipwreck & Nova |

The SAT came in looking to prove themselves against the veteran duo of Whipwreck and Nova, and the opening minutes were all about speed. Jose and Joel used crisp double-teams: stereo dropkicks, quick tags, and a top-rope double stomp/senton combo to keep Nova isolated. Once Mikey got the tag, the pace shifted. The veteran grounded the Maximos with stiff strikes and just enough rule-bending to turn momentum. Nova followed up with his signature high-flying offense, including a rolling neck snap and a slingshot legdrop. The finish came when the SAT went for their Spanish Fly on Nova, but Mikey shoved Jose off the ropes and caught Joel with a Whippersnapper. Nova hit a top-rope legdrop for the pin, giving the veteran team the hard-fought win.

Winners: Nova & Mikey Whipwreck

In the post-match Nova would prove to be a little bit too flamboyant in his celebration and it was clear that Mikey Whipwreck wasn't a fan of his partner taking the spotlight as he would spin Nova around and slap him across the face before wiping his partner out with the Whipper-Snapper (his version of a Stunner). This would be met with jeers and boos from the crowd, but Whipwreck soaked it all up and actually smiled like a joyful child with a bag full of sweets on Halloween night as he flipped off the crowd and walked to the back having been energized from the fans turning on him and making him an instant heel in the process.

* * *


- Match Three - Headliner Singles Match -
| Steve Corino vs. Christopher Daniels |

Two masters of ring psychology squared off in a measured battle that built from technical wrestling into a hard-hitting war. The opening minutes saw Daniels and Corino trading holds and counterholds, each man looking for the smallest opening. Daniels worked the pace up with sharp strikes and a slingshot elbow, but Corino answered with precision suplexes and grinding forearms. Midway through, Daniels took control with his methodical offense, targeting Corino’s neck and wearing him down for the Last Rites. Corino weathered the storm, blocking the finisher and turning the tide with a sudden Old School Expulsion for a near fall that had the crowd on edge. In the final stretch, both men traded bombs: Daniels hit the Best Moonsault Ever for a two-count, but Corino caught him on the next exchange with a superkick flush on the jaw. Without hesitation, Corino followed with a Northern Lights Bomb, scoring the clean three-count after exactly fifteen minutes on the clock.

Winner: Steve Corino

* * *


- Match Four - Headliner Singles Match -
| Bryan Danielson vs. Doug Williams |

From the opening bell, this was a masterclass in pure wrestling. Bryan Danielson and Doug Williams went hold-for-hold, each man testing the other’s defenses in a deliberate, technical battle. Williams worked his trademark mat control, chaining armlocks into headscissors and forcing Danielson to fight from underneath. Danielson countered with precision; twisting out of holds and targeting Williams’ arm to set up his own submission game. The pace never rushed, but every exchange had weight. Williams nearly ended it with the Chaos Theory into a crossface, only for Danielson to roll through and escape. The match became a chess game, with both men relentlessly hunting for the tap-out. In the final moments, Danielson blocked a takedown, trapped Williams in a grounded hammerlock, and transitioned seamlessly into the Cattle Mutilation. Williams fought hard, but with no escape in sight, he was forced to submit, giving Danielson the hard-earned victory in a grueling display of technical wrestling.

Winner: Bryan Danielson

After the contest Danielson would take a microphone and speak to the fans. He would demand that in future that respect and honor be upheld in Ring of Honor and would be the first man to coin the term "Code of Honor" in which a handshake at the beginning and end of the match should be compulsory. He would then share his dream for a unique match styles, a gimmick he would refer to as Pure Rules in which the following rules would be applied to any contest:

- Rope Breaks (Each wrestler is allotted three rope breaks to escape pinfalls or submissions. Once these are used, the wrestler cannot use the ropes to break up a pin or submission).

- Closed Fist Punches (Closed-fist punches to the face are not allowed. The first use results in a warning, and the second use leads to disqualification).

- Strikes to the Body (Open-handed slaps and chops to the face are permitted, as are punches to other parts of the body, excluding low blows).

- Outside the Ring (If a wrestler goes to the floor, a 20-count is initiated by the referee).

Danielson would close his his promo by stating that he fully intended on creating a legacy not just for himself but for future generations and he knew he could count on management for having his back and that he fully intended on making wrestling 'Pure'.

* * *


- Match Five - Women's Ranking Rumble -
| 18 Female Entrants |

The ring filled quickly, starting with Mercedes Martinez and Cheerleader Melissa trading heavy shots before Allison Danger joined to break things up. Early alliances formed and dissolved fast, with Sara Del Rey hitting the ring and immediately asserting herself with stiff strikes. Simply Luscious and Sumie Sakai added to the chaos, the first elimination coming when Del Rey dumped Luscious over the top rope with a forearm smash. Daizee Haze, Rain, and Lacey entered in quick succession, bringing speed to the mix. Haze scored the next elimination, low-bridging Sakai to the floor. April Hunter and Trinity brought power, with Hunter sending Haze flying with a clothesline over the top. Talia Madison and Nikki Roxx kept the pace frantic, each narrowly avoiding elimination on the apron.

As the ring grew crowded, Amber O’Neal was tossed by Melissa after a missed dropkick, and Cindy Rogers followed moments later thanks to a Sara Del Rey boot. Mickie Knuckles charged in and made an instant impact, brawling hard with Melissa. Miss DeVille and Tara Charisma rounded out the field. Eliminations came rapid-fire in the closing minutes: Trinity was backdropped to the floor by Mercedes, Rain was tossed by Del Rey, and Melissa finally got knocked off the apron by a double dropkick from Danger and Lacey. The final four were Mercedes Martinez, Sara Del Rey, Allison Danger, and Mickie Knuckles.

Knuckles went first after a Martinez spinebuster sent her over. Danger tried to surprise Mercedes from behind but got backdropped out, leaving the powerhouse Martinez and Del Rey. After a grueling strike exchange, Mercedes caught Del Rey in a fireman’s carry and dumped her over the top rope, standing tall as the winner of the Women’s Rumble.

Winner: Mercedes Martinez

Jeff Gorman the ringside announcer would confirmed that Mercedes, Sara Del Rey, Allison Danger & Mickie Knuckles had been the final four to be eliminated and had all earned themselves not only an official ranking but also would be offered contract that would promise multiple bookings in the future as was a standing commitment to making Ring of Honor a heartland for Women's Wrestling.

* * *


- Match Six - Headliner Singles Match -
| Jerry Lynn vs. AJ Styles |

What started as a respectful test of skill turned into a war of attrition between the wily veteran and the hungry young phenom. The early minutes saw crisp chain wrestling and counter sequences, Lynn slowing the pace and grounding AJ whenever the younger man tried to quicken it. AJ fired back with explosive dropkicks and springboard offense, but Lynn’s ring awareness kept him one step ahead. By the fifteen-minute mark, tempers flared. A clash at ringside sent both men into the guardrail, and when AJ caught Lynn with a flying forearm that split him open, the tone shifted from competitive to brutal. Minutes later, Lynn returned the favor, driving AJ face-first into the post and opening him up as well.

The canvas became a smear of red as each man traded punishing near-falls: Styles hitting the Spiral Tap for two, Lynn surviving with a foot on the ropes; Lynn delivering a cradle piledriver that AJ somehow kicked out of. The finish came deep into the twenty-fifth minute, both men barely standing. AJ went for a second Spiral Tap, but Lynn rolled clear and hooked him into a sudden small package for the three-count. No posturing, no cheap shots, just two blood-covered warriors slumped on the mat, the veteran’s hand raised while the crowd gave both men a standing ovation. Lynn would help Styles back up to his feet and both men would shake hands fully respecting the 'Code of Honor' and being the first pairing to do so, breathing air in Danielson's vision.

Winner: Jerry Lynn

* * *


- Main Event - Headliner Singles Match -
| Samoa Joe vs. Low Ki |

From the opening bell, the crowd knew they were seeing something special. Samoa Joe and Low Ki locked up in a tense, grinding collar-and-elbow, each testing the other’s power and poise. The first fifteen minutes were a chess match of stiff kicks, grinding submissions, and bursts of explosive offense Joe using his size to muscle Ki into the corners, Ki chopping down Joe’s base with rapid-fire low kicks. By the halfway point, the match had escalated into a war. Joe’s face was marked from Ki’s blistering strikes, while Ki’s chest was crimson from Joe’s chops. The pace never slowed Ki surviving a brutal Muscle Buster at the thirty-minute mark, Joe barely reaching the ropes after being trapped in the Dragon Clutch.

Every near fall drew louder reactions, every strike exchange left both men staggering. In the final ten minutes, desperation took over. Ki hit the Ki Krusher for a razor-close two-count, Joe answered with a snap powerbomb into an STF, and the crowd roared with every escape. The closing seconds saw both men trading forearms center ring, neither willing to fall. The bell finally sounded at the sixty-minute mark, the time limit expired, leaving both warriors collapsed on the mat, exhausted and unbroken. The fans rose to their feet, chanting for “five more minutes,” but the draw was official a testament to the endurance, skill, and sheer will of two of the very best in the game.

Result: Draw

Samoa Joe would look exhausted but annoyed but rather than face Low Ki he would turn towards the back and demand that the next match he take part in better not end in a draw whether it be against Low Ki or any of the other men that had competed tonight. The fans would end the night shouting 'JOE! JOE! JOE!' at the top of their lungs as ROH's Welcome Player One would draw to a conclusion.
 

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Ring of Honour confirms that they are not going to be a one show wonder and announce that their second show will once again take place live from the Murphy Recreation Center (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) on the 30th March and will be billed as 'One More Time'. It seems that after last the first show one match that the fans wanted to see again is Samoa Joe against Low Ki, so that is exactly what ROH is going to provide as the two men have been booked to face each other once again in singles match but with the promise that there will be no time limit and that the match will not end until a winner is confirmed.

Bryan Danielson's idea of a Pure Rules Match had gathered a lot of interest from both those who had been present at Welcome Player One and those wresters who had been looking inwards and it would be announced that not one, but two matches would be contested under the newly formatted gimmick. Bryan Danielson versus Jerry Lynn would be the first match to be booked. The second would see Doug Williams who had fallen short to Danielson, challenge a man who wasn't present at the last show Elix Skipper who at one time had been involved in the tag team Cruiserweight scene in WCW. The match would be set with Doug Williams vs. Elix Skipper the third match to be officially added to the card.

The beatdown by Mikey Whipwreck would not be forgotten by Nova. Although rather than bring the feud to a conclusion anytime soon it would be announced that the duo would face other in tag competition. Nova would team up with Blue Meanie to bring back the Blue World Order potentially one last time, whilst Whipwreck would have acquired the services of Konnan with both additions garnering interest from different audiences for Blue World Order (Nova & Blue Meanie) vs. Mikey Whipwreck & Konnan.

There would also be confirmation of information surrounding the first championship belt that would be launched by the promotion and it would take place on the 30th March.
 
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One thing that would be noticed upon arrival that there were official representative of the National Wrestling Alliance present at Ring of Honor's second event once again coming live from the Murphy Recreation Center. It would be then announced that the NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship would be defended in tonight's opening contest with champion Shinya Hashimoto defending the strap against Sterling James Keenan.

- Match One - NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship -
| Shinya Hashimoto vs. Sterling James Keenan |
The bout was a classic clash of styles: Hashimoto’s bruising, disciplined strong style against Keenan’s methodical, almost cerebral offense. From the opening lock-up, Hashimoto peppered Keenan with thunderous mid-kicks, forcing the challenger into the ropes early. Keenan slowed the pace, targeting the champion’s leg with stomps and a twisting knee drop to cut down the champion’s kicking power. Midway through, Keenan shocked the crowd by countering a DDT into a sharp snap suplex, then locking in a modified STF, wrenching on Hashimoto’s neck. The champion fought free, rallying with his signature overhand chops that echoed through the arena. A desperation spinning wheel kick from Hashimoto staggered Keenan, setting up a short lariat and a huge DDT. After a tense exchange, Hashimoto blasted Keenan with a final jumping DDT, holding for the three-count to retain the NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship. Post-match, Hashimoto offered a respectful nod to the young challenger, who left the ring battered but defiant.

Winner:
Shinya Hashimoto

After the contest as he celebrated the victory Shinya would pull on a ROH black tee which perhaps was an indication that he had an more long-term interest in being part of Ring of Honor as more than just a guest.

* * *

Mercedes Martinez would feature in a recorded promo on the big screen for the fans at ringside to mull over. In brief Martinez would go on record in stating that she was embarrassed that Sara Del Rey, Allison Danger & Mickie Knuckles were currently ranked at all because in her books if you didn't win a match then you lost and therefore every single other woman at 'Welcome Player One' was equally a loser and she was the only woman on the books worth talking about. She would go on to make the point that when a title belt was eventually revealed she had fully expectations to be the first name on the billing. This was met with a mixed reaction, largely due to the fact that Martinez had yet to really establish herself as a big name in the independent scene and just came off as a bit bigheaded.

* * *


- Match Two - Singles Match -
| Miss DeVille vs. Tara Charisma |

This one was a low-stakes bout between two women still trying to find their footing in the promotion, and unfortunately, it showed. The opening minutes were marked by tentative lock-ups and some mistimed strikes, drawing a restless murmur from the crowd. Miss DeVille controlled early with basic offense arm wringers, a bodyslam, and a slow chinlock, but her follow-through was sloppy. Tara Charisma mounted a short comeback with a pair of dropkicks and a swinging neckbreaker, though the timing was again off, and the impact looked light. The finish came almost out of nowhere: DeVille ducked a clothesline, hit a rudimentary bulldog, and scored the pin at around the five minute mark. The match didn’t do much to raise either woman’s stock, and the fans seemed ready for the next contest by the time the bell rang.

Winner: Miss DeVille

* * *

Rob Feinstein would come out from the back and be flanked by various referee and backstage staff. Rob would announce that the men and women would each have a championship belt to be proud of as he would unveil the ROH Women's Championship belt and the ROH World Championship belt. He would then announce that both titles would contested for in tournament style single elimination matches and he would invite talent from around the world to compete in a hope to truly create the most prestigious inaugural champions possible but had yet to decide how many entrants would challenge and therefore what date the champions would be crowned.


apvmT4y.jpeg


* * *

- Match Three - Tag Team Match -
| Blue World Order (Nova & Blue Meanie) vs. Mikey Whipwreck & Konnan |
The bell barely rang before Whipwreck and Konnan jumped the Blue World Order like they owed them money. Chairs, trash cans, and even a dented stop sign came into play within the first minute, with Meanie eating a chair shot so stiff the front row winced. Nova tried to fire back with a flurry of punches, but Konnan cut him off with a low blow and a DDT onto the edge of a cookie sheet. From there it was all merciless punishment, Whipwreck hitting a swinging neckbreaker to Meanie through a table propped in the corner, while Konnan choked Nova with a piece of extension cord he found under the ring. The crowd ate it up, chanting “E-C-Dub!” as the beating continued. The finish came when Whipwreck launched Nova off the top into a steel chair held by Konnan, who then casually draped an arm over him for the pin.

Winners: Mikey Whipwreck & Konnan

The Blue World Order would be laid out, drenched in blood and barely moving as the fans would show their approval of the carnage. It was an interest thought that ROH was creating a hardcore wrestling feeling to it, whilst also at the same time looking to champion Danielson's Pure Rules style at the same time. One had to wonder how long the two opposing styles could co-exist.

* * *

Pamela Paulshock would interview Low Ki in the ring ahead of Low Ki scheduled to take part in the show's main-event. Low Ki would show his confidence ahead of the match later this evening and with confidence exclaim that a victory tonight would surely seal his place in the tournament for the ROH World Championship although would make the point that if management had any sense he suspected that both himself and Samoa Joe would be involved in the tournament for it to carry any weight.

* * *


- Match Four - Pure Rules Match -
| Doug Williams vs. Elix Skipper |

This was a sharp stylistic contrast: Williams, the consummate British technician, against Skipper’s athletic, high-flying flair. Under Pure Rules, rope breaks and closed fists were at a premium, and Williams immediately sought to burn through Skipper’s breaks by chaining arm drags into hammerlocks and forcing the challenger to grab the ropes twice in the first five minutes. Skipper rallied with bursts of speed, hitting a spinning heel kick and a crisp tilt-a-whirl headscissors, but Williams slowed the pace, grounding him with a textbook cravat and methodical knee drops to the arm. Midway through, Skipper landed a springboard crossbody for a near fall, but it cost him his final rope break when Williams rolled through into a Fujiwara armbar. The finish came when Williams countered a sudden Play of the Day attempt into a seamless Chaos Theory rolling German suplex, bridging for the three-count. Williams extended a hand post-match a show of Pure division respect which Skipper accepted, begrudgingly.

Winner: Doug Williams

* * *


- Match Five – Triple Threat Elimination Match -
| CM Punk & Colt Cabana vs. Joey Matthews & Christian York vs. The Briscoes (Mark & Jay) |

From the opening bell, all three teams brought frantic energy, with bodies flying in and out of the ring. Punk and Cabana used their chemistry to keep the action grounded early, isolating Matthews with quick tags and double-team holds, but The Briscoes countered with raw, youthful aggression Jay drilling Punk with a stiff forearm while Mark hit a springboard dropkick to Cabana. The first elimination came just under ten minutes in: chaos spilled to the floor, and as the referee’s attention was pulled by Cabana and Jay brawling, York slipped in behind Mark and rolled him up with a handful of tights. The three-count shocked the crowd, sending The Briscoes to the back fuming and jawing with fans at ringside.

The match then shifted into a straight tag between Punk & Cabana and Matthews & York, with momentum swinging wildly. Punk nearly had it with a Pepsi Plunge attempt, but York countered into a top-rope superplex, leaving both men down. Matthews tagged in, hit Cabana with a swinging neckbreaker, and York sealed the deal with a picture-perfect leg drop from the top for the final pin. York and Matthews celebrated like they’d stolen one, whilst Punk and Cabana stared daggers at them from the mat, setting the stage for a heated rematch down the line.

Winners: Christian York & Joey Matthews

Punk would look furious and look like he was ready to snap, but Cabana would pull his partner back knowing they would be at a disadvantage in this exact moment.

* * *

- Match Six - Pure Rules Match -
| Bryan Danielson vs. Jerry Lynn |

This one was a masterclass in patience, precision, and heart. Lynn brought the experience edge, using slick counters and crisp chain wrestling to frustrate Danielson early. The veteran burned through none of his rope breaks in the first ten minutes, using fluid escapes to keep the match even. Danielson, for his part, tried to dictate the tempo, focusing on Lynn’s left arm with European uppercuts and twisting armbars. Midway through, Lynn nearly stole it, countering a Danielson back suplex into a cradle for a razor-close two-count, then hitting a picture-perfect tornado DDT for another near fall. Danielson, visibly rattled, found himself down to his final rope break after Lynn transitioned into a guillotine choke. Just when it looked like Lynn had the match in hand, Danielson turned the tide. Dodging a charge into the corner, he tripped Lynn into the turnbuckle, pounced with a dragon screw, and immediately flowed into the Cattle Mutilation. Lynn clawed desperately for the ropes but had no breaks left, and the referee called for the bell. Danielson collapsed back, sweat-drenched and smiling faintly, a man who had pulled victory from the jaws of certain defeat. Lynn, ever the sportsman, offered a handshake, and the crowd gave both men a standing ovation.

Winner: Bryan Danielson

Despite having lost Jerry Lynn would ask for a microphone and offer high praises in Danielson's direction. Lynn would insist that Danielson's name be thrown into the hat and couldn't think of anything better than the first ROH World Champion being Pure.

* * *


- Main Event - No Time Limit Match -
| Low Ki vs. Samoa Joe |

One month earlier at ROH: Welcome Player One, these two tore the house down in a sixty-minute war that ended in a time limit draw. Tonight, there would be no clock to save either man. The crowd was buzzing before the bell, fully aware they were about to see something special. From the opening tie-up, the tone was set stiff, deliberate, and unrelenting. Low Ki tried to use his speed and precision strikes, peppering Joe’s legs with low kicks, then snapping off a quick dropkick to the knee. Joe absorbed the early offense, barely flinching, and responded with a crushing elbow to the jaw that sent Ki reeling. The first five minutes were a feeling-out process, but with both men landing bombs, it felt like a powder keg ready to blow. Ki targeted Joe’s base relentlessly, chopping away at the thigh and sweeping him to the mat for a kneebar. Joe broke free and shifted gears, bulldozing Ki into the corner with a flurry of body shots before lighting him up with a brutal facewash kick that had the front row gasping. The match spilled outside, where Joe whipped Ki into the guardrail with such force it nearly came loose, then crushed him with a tope suicida that looked like it could have knocked the air from his lungs.

Back inside, the pace quickened. Ki landed a desperation springboard enzuigiri that stunned Joe and followed with the Tidal Wave in the corner, earning a two-count that had the fans biting. Joe answered with a snap powerslam for his own near fall, then locked in the Coquina Clutch. Ki somehow rolled through into a pinning predicament, forcing Joe to release at two-and-a-half. The final minutes were pure grit. Ki hit the Ki Crusher for a count so close the fans were already on their feet thinking it was over. Joe roared back with a lariat that turned Ki inside out, then tried for the Muscle Buster — only for Ki to counter mid-lift into a guillotine choke. The two struggled in the center, sweat pouring, each man refusing to break. Finally, Joe muscled Ki up for a second Muscle Buster attempt, connected clean, and collapsed into the cover. And claimed the three count to pick up the win. It had taken just under 90 minutes over the course of two matches for a winner would finally be found.

Winner: Samoa Joe

Post-match, Joe, barely able to stand, extended a hand. Ki hesitated, then accepted, to a standing ovation. This wasn’t just a main event it was the definitive statement that both men were cornerstones of the promotion’s future. For the second show in a row that fan's would chant 'JOE! JOE! JOE!' nonstop until the fan favourite made his way behind the curtain.
 

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I've really been enjoying this project so far. Your format is fantastic, I really like the entire presentation. ROH from 02-06 was so much fun and holds a special place for me, as some of my fondest childhood memories were at ROH shows. I'm looking forward to the eventual venue name drop of RexPlex in NJ, I went to a lot of ROH shows there at one time.

Booking wise, you have your building blocks in Joe, Ki, and Dragon, and all have been booked really well through the first two shows. The women's division is fitting in nicely, as is the build of the tag division.

Keep these shows coming, my friend! They are a blast to read. Wishing you the best of luck on this!
 

Spitfire

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The Murphy Recreation Center was becoming a bit of a homestay for Ring of Honor, although the local Philly fans seemed to have no problem with showing their support for the new indie promotion. The third show was scheduled for the 27th April and would be announced as 'Third Time Lucky' with confirmation that both the men's and women's championship tournaments would feature on the evening's card. It would also be confirmed that the inaugural champions would be crowned in over six months time in October with the name of event yet to be announced. It would also be noted that Ring of Honor was looking to continue to have a strong relationship with the National Wrestling Alliance as well as a number of indies present on the scene which wasn't at all surprising considering the financial collapse of WCW less than a year ago. A rumour had started to circulate that Jeff Jarrett and his father Jerry were heavily interested in investing deeply into ROH after apparently failing to come to agreement with sponsors on another prospective venture.

Two matches would be confirmed for the ROH World Championship tournament. Bryan Danielson vs. Monty Brown would be the first match confirmed for the card, although it would be made clear that the match would not be contested under Pure Rules. As much as the match type was garnering interest, it was clear that this tournament was really about raising prestige and not turning Ring of Honor into a complete gimmick promotion. The second match would be a real head turner as two rather big names in the Japanese wrestling scene were booked to face each other, with it meaning that no matter what one of the two would appear at another ROH event in the future. The match would see Yuji Nagata take on Satoshi Kojima. Another Japanese star would feature on the billing in the Women's Tournament with Rumi Kazama versus Mickie Knuckles (seeded) being the first match in the second tournament.

 
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