Review the Kraken: I Love It When A Plan Comes Together

Review the Kraken: I Love It When A Plan Comes Together

Telling a long-term story in pro wrestling is not easy, especially at the independent level. Injuries, politics or flaky talent can disrupt even a rather simple plan.

Kudos to Kraken Pro Wrestling. then, for pulling it off.

Kraken’s one-year anniversary from May of 2025, the Kraken Classic, also represented the culmination of a one-year storyline. At the first Kraken Classic, Jay 2 Strong won the tournament to become the first-ever Kraken Champion, then bequeathed the championship to his manager, Justin Kayse, the leader of The Business. Kayse held the title for a year and never defended it. Instead, he used members of The Business as proxies against any aspiring challenger. Win against one of The Business — first Jay, then Dominic Stuckey – and earn a three-minute match against Kayse for the title. Except actually reaching Kayse was a hurdle that no one could clear. Kayse went a full year and never had to actually defend the title, mostly due to trickery and shenanigans by him and the members of The Business.

In this review, we tackle the culmination of that storyline, which came with an incredibly satisfying payoff.

It took a long time for me to fully digest this review to the point where it coalesced as a written piece for me. Part of that is that I’ve been busy writing about other things, both here and elsewhere. I’ve also been busy on the family front. And the work front. I also wanted to make sure I did justice to all the work that went into building what I consider the “season 1 finale” of Kraken. Not just the traditional concept of work as it pertains to wrestling and what happens in the ring. Work in interviews and backstage segments and commentary to develop characters and drive the story. Hopefully, this end result reflects and honors the amount of work that went into this climactic chapter.

With all that said, let’s dive right into the review.

Episode 50

The final match of the Kraken Classic puts Charlie Kills against Lamar Diggs after each won a four-way match earlier in the taping. Charlie has shaken up his usual look, and I’m getting Spoiler vibes — in a good way — from the red mask. Charlie has leaned increasingly into his “friendly neighborhood maybe-a-serial-killer” persona in Kraken. I greatly enjoyed the little touches here: the fish hooking, the joint manipulation, pulling on Diggs’ nose, and even an ankle stomp.

Diggs is also a favorite of mine on the Kraken roster. He’s the most physically imposing wrestler on the entire roster and he sells well. Diggs busts out some great facial expressions in this one. Meanwhile, he goes deep into the ol’ moveset. He uses some open-handed palm strikes to break a submission hold by Charlie, and later, I certainly didn’t expect a cross face out of the heavy hitter of The Business. Diggs wins out of nowhere with a flash pin, flipping forward out of a double leg bridge (the big guy is nimble!) and perfectly planting his feet on the bottom rope for the extra leverage. I cracked up after the match when Diggs is holding up the Kraken Classic trophy with one hand and a screaming child with the other. This was a very good match that was well worth seeing, and having Diggs win the tournament — and the guaranteed shot at the Kraken Title — scoops some extra drama onto the Aeom-Stuckey match, and the prospect of The Business having total control of the championship scene if Aeon falls short.

This is a very good match that is worth seeing, and also an important plot point if you’ve been following Kraken from week to week like I have. There is untapped potential for both Diggs and Charlie coming out of this tournament. I still look forward to the potential day when Diggs and Kayse split, and Diggs is able to get his hands on the manager.

A few other notes… The camera work here in this match shows how full the crowd is, and it’s a pretty packed house. The commentary could have been better. Diamond Duke goes back to complaining about the speed of the referee’s count, because it’s anytime. Meanwhile, the “Make a name for yourself!” line by Donnie Harris before a near-fall pin by Charlie. Note to self, guys and girls… not every wrestler is Jeff Hardy in a ladder match with The Undertaker from 2001.

Episode 51

This might be my favorite episode yet of Kraken TV. in the entire run. Kevin Kantrell is one of the MVPs of the promotion and he takes center stage in this episode. He has a good interview with Kay Casiano. We then get a “hidden camera” segment backstage involving ERC and Brandon Whatley, where, maybe for the first time in televised wrestling, the hidden camera actually makes logical sense.

Those were the appetizers. Let’s dig into the main course, the one-on-one match between Kantrell and Joe Black. I’ve known Joe for more than a decade and seen him evolve, grow, and change as a wrestler but more importantly as a character and a presence. He’s a guy I always felt warranted an opportunity on a larger stage. Maybe one day …

There’s a big fight feel for this match. It’s Joe’s debut in Kraken but previous episodes have done a good job establishing him and he already feels like a rather well-known quantity even before the bell rings. Some people reading this are going to roll their eyes at the comparison I’m about to make, but the way Joe carries himself during this match reminded me of Samoa Joe during his run as ROH Champion, which I mean as quite a high compliment. Joe is here for a match and a payoff; he’s also here to test the mettle of Kantrell and see how good he truly is. The actual wrestling here is quite good, and though these holds and exchanges are things a longtime wrestling fan like me has seen a thousand times, they crackle with intensity. Meanwhile, audible trash talk by Joe during the match is the fuel that propels the narrative. The announcers diminish their presence so these words can be heard clearly on the footage.

After an initial hold-for-hold exchange, Joe dismisses Kantrell as “light work.” Later, when they transition from mat wrestling to striking, Joe taunts Kantrell as a “big fish in a small pond”, goading Kantrell to administer a forearm but instead poking Kantrell in the eye — a bait and switch that I enjoyed immensely — before the blow can be delivered. When Joe follows up with some wicked-sounding chops in the corner, Kantrell piefaces Joe in response in a tremendous distillation of his defiance and resolve.

This feels like more of a back and forth match than the traditional structure with heat and shine. At one point, and I’m not sure if it was intentional or not, Joe busts out a bridging variation of the Mutalock — the same old Kantrell used to tap Will Huckaby (Joe’s longtime friend turned nemesis) at the end of 2024. A spinning forearm is delivered with a healthy amount of strong style. Kantrell unleashes an Avalanche Samoan Drop. Later, Kantrell strings together an Alabama Slam into a Styles Clash, leading to a convincing near-fall where both men’s shoulders are down — a detail I wish was made more of on commentary. The payoff comes when Kantrell delivers a brain buster, then rolls into his cross face hold to force Joe to tap. In the aftermath, Joe offers a handshake to Kantrell — the same gesture Kantrell offered and Joe refused in a backstage interview from earlier in this taping.

Tremendous.

Episode 52

This episode, the finale from the Kraken Classic event, is all about Justin Kayse and his ill-begotten Kraken Title reign. With Diggs winning the tournament earlier, it’s positioned — and rightfully so — as a last-chance, all-or-nothing scenario if there is to be any integrity at all in the championship scene. The episode begins with the contract signing between Aeon and Stuckey from earlier that day, which I mention only to note the moment where Donnie — who doubles as GM and lead commentator — mentions he wouldn’t mind seeing Dom as champion one day and Stuckey flashes a brief but very purposeful glance at his manager and the title slung over one shoulder.

Kay Casiano brings it up a notch on her introductions for this one, and once again a big-fight feel is established right off the bat. Once again, the rules here are that, if Aeon beats Stuckey, he gets a three-minute title match with Justin Kayse. The Aeon-Stuckey match is also no disqualification. The two combatants lean right into the stipulation, starting out hot with back-and-forth blows and then spilling to the floor. Kraken doesn’t do brawls outside the ring very often (Huckaby and Diggs had a memorable one way back) so it stands out when it does happen. Aeon pursuing Stuckey around the ring on all fours is a nice, novel touch.

I don’t think it’s possible for me to pick just one favorite wrestler on the Kraken roster, but both these guys are in the conversation. Stuckey really shines in this match with his facial expressions and trash talk. The no-DQ stipulation flows in both ways. Aeon takes Kayse’s loaded briefcase across the back, then spills to the floor to really get the heat of the match boiling. Then, when Stuckey puts Aeon in a modified cross face looking for the submission, Aeon pulls Kayse into Dom to break up the hold. Justin Kayse oversells this fairly modest impact like he’s been hit with a tranquilizer dart, to my profound amusement.

Dom follows up with a package piledriver (I added a couple of exclamation points to this in my live notes), but Aeon kicks out strong. Dom doesn’t like it, confronts Referee Clark, and decks him. Aeon hits his finisher, and here comes Referee Pee Wee, only to have Kayse wallop him with the briefcase. We’re out of referees… and that means the chaos begins.

This taping had The Business referring to a “Plan B” for this match throughout, and Jay 2 Strong looks to be the cornerstone of that plan, running in and blasting Aeon with a superkick. What proceeds is a long-running series of run-ins involving every wrestler on the card. Sometimes they come out one at a time, sometimes two at a time. On each occasion, the new entrant to the chaos drops whomever came in right before, a quick-hitting, lengthy series of interference spots that I won’t dare to attempt to recap in full here. The sequence does get a little wonky at times and reflects the overall population imbalance between fan favorites and rulebreakers on the roster, as there are a few instances of babyface-on-babyface-violence during the series of run-ins. The crowd, however, loves every bit of it.

The run-in parade eventually circles all the way back around to Jay, who goes to superkick Aeon and hits his stablemate Dom by mistake. This single moment escalates everything. The crowd goes wild. Babyface wrestlers surround the ring and are banging on the apron as Jak Myles dispatches Jay with a Russian legsweep (because he’s the Sweeper, you see), and then, Superman-style, sheds his coveralls to reveal referee gear underneath, calling back to the very first Kraken tapings where a down on his luck Sweeper had to referee matches as well for extra money. Aeon hits his finisher again on Stuckey and Sweeper counts the pin, to an absolutely insane crowd reaction. For a minute there, I thought I was watching mid-1980s Jim Crockett Promotions. (Tip of the hat to Diggs, who timed it so he was oh so close to breaking up the pin).

The focus immediately shifts to Justin Kayse, who goes running out of the building. He’s pursued, and there’s a fantastic visual where several of the fan favorite wrestlers carry a protesting Kayse back into the arena and dump him into the ring. Now the ring is entirely circled, with wrestlers and fans pounding on the apron. In another nice touch, Diggs and Jay are being held back on the floor so they cannot interfere. Kayse offers Aeon a literal fist full of dollars to try and avoid what’s coming. Diamond Duke, who roots endlessly for The Business on commentary, is apoplectic throughout all of this.

Aeon answers Kayse’s bribery offer with controlled violence. He destroys Kayse with two moves and is quite safe with him in the process, especially considering Kayse is a non-wrestler. Sweeper counts the pin, and there’s another eruption from crowd and commentary alike as the Justin Kayse reign (of terror?) comes to a definitive end.

Final Thoughts

I can’t count the number of times I see or hear someone explain that a wrestling outcome is “predictable.” Some of the best stories ever told, in various mediums, have a predictable conclusion. Even if you see the final destination coming from miles away, the joy comes in the journey, and the precise route taken to reach the end point.

These three episodes represent Kraken at its greatest heights to date. The final two episodes, featuring Kantrell vs. Black and the Aeon-Stuckey-Kayse drama, stand head and shoulders above anything the promotion has done. Which one is better? I would say that the Kantrell-Black episode has more of a standalone element of quality; you can enjoy it thoroughly without having any significant context or prior knowledge or viewing of Kraken. The final episode from this taping, however, feels like the last chapter of a long, compelling book you’ve spent quite some time reading through. If you’ve been following along this whole time like I have, there’s a satisfaction in the conclusion that can’t be reached without knowing all the players, twists, and turns that led to that moment.

Check out all three episodes, embedded below:

From the Crow’s Nest: November, 1977

From the Crow’s Nest: November, 1977

Welcome to the third installment of From the Crow’s Nest, a series of articles looking back at Pacific Northwest Wrestling and the history of wrestling in Portland, Oregon.

In this week’s installment, we cover available footage from November of 1977. Most of the footage comes from a pair of episodes, two weeks apart. You can find everything in this installment on YouTube and I’ve embedded a playlist at the bottom of this article.

November 5, 1977

We’re two weeks removed from the rather fantastic angle and turn involving Sam Oliver Bass (aka Ron Bass), Buddy Rose, and Ed Wiskowski. Bass and Rose faced each other on last week’s episode, which is not available, but we get this entertaining rematch., which also recycles the trope of Rose wrestling a match with a fan favorite positioned as the special referee, although Dutch Savage isn’t nearly as entertaining in that role as Jonathan Boyd was for Rose’s match with Jay Youngblood back in September.

Savage promptly kicks out Wiskowski from ringside, on the threat of disqualifying Rose if Ed doesn’t skedaddle. Bass focuses in on the left arm of Rose, who submits to what Frank Bonnema calls an arm scissors. Rose gets minimal offense in this fall, it’s minimal. He spends much of the fall begging off and running away, which only serves to make Bass come off that much stronger.

After the usual mix of live-to-tape and pre-recorded commercials for sponsors (Tom Peterson has 20 Monte Carlos on the lot for $5,400 each!), Bonnema interviews Wiskowski, who has a match on the upcoming loop against Savage for the heavyweight singles title. What ensues is a very good example of how to do a promo as a confident and arrogant heel wrestler without making your foe look weak.

Rose comes out for the second hall and honors the wrestling gods by still selling the arm. He’s back to stalling and running away, before finally getting the upper hand in Bass after a spot you’ve seen thousands of times: the heel lures their foe into a chase around the ringside area, then cuts off his opponent when they go back into the ring. Rose targets the back of Bass and levels the match on his version of the backbreaker, which has been established in Portland as a strong finisher.

Between falls, Bonnema interviews the plucky babyface duo of Skip Young and Gino Hernandez. I found it interesting that, to me, Gino comes off like a long-lost member of the Von Erich family in what footage of him exists from Portland.

The third fall is brief and high energy, like many of these best of three falls main events tend to be as the show is usually running short on time by this point. Bass kicks out of another backbreaker by Rose and makes his comeback, capped by a punch with some extra mustard that Rose sells with his trademark slipped-on-a-banana-peel bump. While Savage scolds Bass for the punches, Rose comes up bleeding. The match ends shortly thereafter, with Wiskowski coming out to attack Savage and add some heat to their upcoming title match.

This is all pretty good, but we’ve already seen much better so far in this project.

After the match, Savage heads to the crow’s nest and tells Bonnema he’s putting Rose in a cage match against Bass the coming Tuesday. He cites “Don Owen’s power of attorney.” Bonnema’s subsequent verbal gymnastics to justify a wrestler having the authority to book this match come off pretty funny, which is likely not the intended effect. Rose’s reaction is pretty great — full of bloodstained outrage as Wiskowski proclaims, “he is a human being!” The promo work by the heels is good enough to make me wish that footage of the cage match existed.

November 19, 1977

The video quality of this episode is pretty poor, so be prepared.

It’s been a busy two weeks in Portland. Wiskowski has dethroned Savage as the heavyweight champ. Bass and Anson remain the tag champs, but in footage from this episode that apparently has been lost to the sands of time, Anson suffers an injury that’s going to put him on the shelf. This plot point anchors what footage survived from this week.

The main event is a rematch of last month’s great bout between Rose and Mayne. This is still good but doesn’t come close to the energy and crowd heat of the October match. After Mayne wins a pretty straightforward first fall with his flying knee drop, which does not evoke vomit this time — Rose just sells like he’s dead — Bonnema reviews the upcoming seven-day (!) loop.

Next we hear from Bass about the tag title situation. He’s down a partner now and championship matches have been booked on the upcoming loop. Bass’ straightforward, relatable delivery works here.

This is an outlier main event for Portland, as it ends in two straight falls. There’s some noteworthy improvisation that takes place around an equipment malfunction, when Mayne fires Rose across the ring and the impact breaks the top rope. Each wrestler attempts to use the dislodged turnbuckle against the other. Rose wins the fall with his back breaker but stays on the attack, to the point Sandy Barr disqualifies Rose and reverses the decision. Bass comes to make the save for Mayne, so you can probably guess where things are leading.

There’s still time in the episode so we get some filler content. First up an interview with Savage, who becomes more unlikable the more footage I watch of him. He engages in some very dry mockery of Anson for his injury, shits on the San Francisco territory, and then starts talking about his son’s high school football team.

These episodes fall into a certain predictable rhythm. As part of that rhythm, Bonnema has one or two plugs a week about how to get tickets. He seems borderline frustrated at having to explain time and time again, but I find it charming how the best way to get them is to go to the referee’s stand at the flea market.

Next, Gino Hernandez wrestles Skip Young in a standby match which, if you’ve watched old wrestling previously, usually means that the competitors go out there and durdle until the time limit expires. This match follows that pattern. Even Bonnema can’t disguise his boredom, referring to the usually vocal Portland Sports Arena crowd as “quiet but enjoying.” This is a snooze for sure, but at least the matchup is unique.

We conclude with Mayne joining Bonnema in the crow’s nest, only for Bass to interrupt and ask the Moondog to be his partner. As simple as much of the storytelling in Portland can be, there’s no attempt to insult the audience’s intelligence. Bass openly acknowledges the past hostile history with Mayne, saying “I thought this day would never come.” Mayne dons Bass’ cowboy hat as the answer, and we’ve got a new tag team.

Up Next: We wrap up 1977 with a look at the available footage from December.

Miss Something?: Check out the full index of articles in the From the Crow’s Nest series.