Review the Kraken: Fan Appreciation Night

Review the Kraken: Fan Appreciation Night

I wrote about this when I got to experience a live Kraken Pro Wrestling event, but the fans at Kraken are their own unique entity. They don’t act like a standard pro wrestling crowd. They don’t do chants. They’re not in on the act. I came away from Tifton with the observation that Kraken fans were fans of Kraken specifically, rather than pro wrestling as a whole.

So the concept of Kraken doing a Fan Appreciation Night, where fans legitimately got to draw the matchups at random to determine the entire card, was intriguing. The powers that be in Kraken corralled a few kids from the audience and had them pull wrestlers’ names out of the hat, at random, just a few minutes before bell time. Opponents, and partners, were decided and then matches came together on the fly.

Along the way, the fans acting as honorary bookers put together one of the best matches Kraken has ever had… but we’ll get to that.

Here are the four episodes covered in this review.

Episode 61

This is the first Kraken event at Chino & Letty’s, which remains the venue for Kraken until now. It looks great on camera and the lighting gives vibes of an old-school studio wrestling show. I wrote about how nice the venue is, especially by standards of independent wrestling, after my live experience.

This episode opens with Kwame the Conqueror taking on Rob Killjoy. Kwame is formerly known as Cassius King (not to be confused with Kassius King, who also is on the Kraken roster). The name change makes Kwame both a known quantity and a new addition in Kraken according to the announcers. The crowd is into quacking for Killjoy. The match? Not so much. Killjoy wins with an O’Connor Roll to end a match that felt long even though it had a 10-minute time limit.

We get a backstage interview with Kay Casiano and new Cash In Hand Champion Kevin Kantrell. Kay does consistent good work with this. Kantrell’s words are fine but forgettable. The CIH title belt looks great, though.

Up next, the first of several mixed-up tags on this Fan Appreciation taping: Sam Hanson and Mr. Wright against Jayy Wells and Jaz Jones in a Tides of War series match. I was wondering who in the world would get the points given the jumbled teams, and bless Donnie for explaining it. Mr. Wright really plays up the schtick of tagging with someone he dislikes (to be fair, he did help give Hanson an unwanted haircut a couple of months before) but Hanson and Wright work together well enough to hit Wells with a modified Hart Attack and, after a blind tag, have Hanson score the pin — and the points for All Star Special.

The headliner of this episode pits Jak Myles against Charlie Kills. It’s the first Kraken appearance for Sweeper since he lost the Cash In Hand Title. Charlie does a lot of little things I enjoy: the joint manipulation and, here, joint stomps. He changes it up here with a double stomp of Jak’s hands into a Meteora and pin attempt. Overall, Charlie pretty much gobbles up Jak Myles here and scores the win. Poor Sweeper can’t catch a break.

Episode 62

An interesting segment to start this episode, as we get our first look at Jay 2 Strong since he was booted from The Business at the last taping. Jay ends up in the locker room with Charlie Kills, of all people, and Charlie speaks for the first time! Charlie offers to lend Jay an ear, a shoulder, or some other implied body part. Pretty good stuff.

More Tides of War action, with the Saturday Night Temptations taking on Lamar Diggs from The Business and Will Huckaby from All Star Special. The odd couple pairing of Diggs and Huckaby, combined with the Temptations, means a ton of comedy and shenanigans take place in this one. Huckaby joins right in with Karl Hager and CJ Shine. Diggs looks close to breaking on a couple of occasions. Diggs takes a rare pinfall loss on an assisted backslide in a silly, fun match.

The Diamond Den makes its return, with Mr. Wright the guest. Mrs. Wright, who’s been absent as of late, is pregnant and Mr. Wright is taking a leave of absence. With the year-long round robin Tides of War tournament already under way. That’s what we writers call a plot point.

Headlining this episode, Kevin Kantrell defends the Cash In Hand Title. The challengers? Brother Azriel, Dominic Stuckey, Jay 2 Strong, Travis Ray, and Tsu Nami. This scramble is stacked and the result is one of the best matches of its type that Kraken has done. I was surprised Jay didn’t jump Stuckey right off the bat after getting booted from The Business. Instead, Stuckey talks trash to everyone else in the match and they all gang up on him. Travis Ray had a good run of offense here and looked impactful without playing for laughs. Kantrell becomes the first Cash In Hand Champion to retain, hooking Tsu Nami in the cross face.

Episode 63

Speed vs. power in the opening match, as ERC takes on Hitta J. This is ostensibly heel vs. heel, but the crowd (after being stone silent at the beginning) starts to get behind ERC as the match progresses. Duke mentions a slow count on commentary because of course he does. Hitta J hits his chokeslam, which looks better with each passing taping, but ERC kicks out and score the win with a quick pinning predicament. I enjoyed the way ERC won, and his crafty style stands out in Kraken, but I felt the chokeslam should have finished the match.

The headliner on this episode is, not the best match of this set of tapings, but one I probably enjoyed the most: Quick Drip (the duo of Nick Quick and Dante Dripp) against the odd couple randomly drawn pair of Don Haylo and Ehren Black. More shenanigans here, with a Quick Drip dance party that ensnares Haylo and seems like it will never end, until Black blasts Travis Ray, the third member of Quick Drip, with double chops across the back. Ehren Black was the star of this match: the monster who gets fed up with the comedy. There’s a nifty spot where Haylo hoists Quick for a fallaway slam, and tosses him to Black. Haylo puts Dripp in a Boston Crab for the submission win. Quick tries to help and Black catches him, lifts Quick for a back suplex, and spins him into a sit-out pile-driver that sends Quick into the astral plane. Black then, as soon as the match is over, punches Haylo in the face. I cackled in an empty room at that one.

Episode 64

The centerpiece of this episode, and the taping, is another Kraken Pro Title defense. This time, Trever Aeon takes on Joey Hyder.

Kay has the talent to hit another level when she’s doing the introductions for a big match, and she does it again here. She particularly brings this sizzle when announcing Aeon, and it gives these title matches a big-fight feel, every time.

The match itself was a very good, back-and-forth match that (mostly) gets wrestled on the up and up. They combine for a pin attempt on a knuckle lock in the early going — not something you see every day in the 2020s. Hyder gets the upper hand on the technical wrestling, so the champ goes high impact, exploding off the mat with a single-leg takedown, then a double stomp on Hyder before chucking him to the floor. Aeon’s advantage does not last; Hyder throws nearly everything in his arsenal at the champion but pin attempts get a one count, at best. Duke is calling the Kraken fans humanoids and peons during this match. I approve of both; that’s better heel commentary work than constantly complaining about referee counts and double teams. Hyder busts out a standing Spanish fly, then summons John Cena by hitting Aeon with both the Five Knuckle Shuffle and the Attitude Adjustment. Then Hyder goes for his Razzle Dazzle finisher, but Aeon gets his knees and an elbow up to break it. One snap back suplex later, and a Kiss Kiss Bang Bang from Aeon ends one of the better wrestling matches in Kraken history.

Check out the full index of our Kraken content at In Moorehouse Wrestling.

Kraken Pro Wrestling Live Report: April 12

Kraken Pro Wrestling Live Report: April 12

The wife and I found ourselves in Atlanta this past weekend, and Kraken Pro Wrestling just so happened to have a show scheduled for Tifton, on Sunday.

Not only that, this was the go-home show heading into the second anniversary event, the Kraken Classic.

We had to check it out, and we did. So after a three-hour drive from Atlanta that somehow felt longer than the five-hour drive from East Tennessee to Atlanta the night before, we found ourselves at Chino & Letty’s Place, the current home of Kraken.

I’m still way behind the present day on my review series of Kraken and now that I know where things are headed, it will be interesting to watch those episodes from that perspective.

I’ve been to dozens of wrestling shows in my life — some as a fan, some as part of the show. Kraken live is a very different experience from all of them. It’s like the shows happen in their own little self-contained reality. The crowd is not what I would describe as a typical wrestling crowd. They don’t start chants. They don’t heckle wrestlers. They don’t react to big spots or moves, although they sure do enjoy a nasty chop, and they got several of them on this card. It’s also not a dead crowd, by any means. The fan interaction during the entrances, between matches, and at intermission shows that.

Unique.

This was also the go-home show before the Kraken Classic, the second anniversary show for the promotion. Last year’s Kraken Classic was the culmination of most of the main storylines in the first year, and the upcoming anniversary show looks to be the same.

Let’s dive into the results. Thanks to my wife, Sandi Moorehouse, for taking the pictures.

Match 1: Nick Quick vs. CT Entertainment

I got to the show early and stayed late and got to chat with several members of the roster, including Nick. I told him before the show that it was highly entertaining to watch him get annihilated every week, and it’s true. He sells well, and it’s helped him carve out a niche. His entrance is incredibly over with the Kraken fans, and likely benefits from the fact the promotion runs regularly out of the same venue.

The match was a basic but solid opener. CT delivered a nice release German suplex that might have made Nick even shorter. After CT confronted Referee Clark about a slow count on a spinebuster, Nick caught him in a backslide basically out of nowhere. CT pursued Clark to the back still complaining. Nick Quick has one of the eight coins going into the Kraken Classic, by the way. He’s a very effective underdog and the fans enjoy to root for him.

Match 2: Johnny Faith vs. Nathaniel Vanderbilt vs. Brandon Whatley

This is for a Kraken coin, and I’m not sure who had the coin coming in, but it’s also the first match back in Kraken for Whatley, who missed about a year of action with a ruptured Achilles. I’d written before about how Vanderbilt’s rich guy persona lended itself more to him being a heel, and it’s happened. He comes out to opera music, wearing a long coat, an obnoxious hat, and exudes a pompous, obsequious attitude that makes you want to see him get punched. Mission accomplished. This was my first look at Johnny Faith, and he showed some good fire. At one point Whatley had him in a hold and when the referee checked for a submission, Johnny screamed out “I never quit!” Vanderbilt spent most of this match on the floor and got walloped by Whatley every time he tried to get back into the ring. When he did get back in, he had a rough-looking landing on a standing shooting star press on Faith. The finish came when Johnny had Vanderbilt pinned, and Whatley smashed Faith in the head with his nunchucks over the referee’s shoulder. That was fine, but then Whatley hit him again right in front of the referee. I get triple threats are usually no DQ, but this was egregious and buried the poor referee.

Match 3: Jak Myles vs. Julian Balderas vs. Hitta J

Another triple threats for a Kraken coin. Man, the kids in Tifton really dig the Sweeper, and he plays up to them in a way that is almost perfect. Balderas is new to me and has a rugged vibe — and a spear — that all reminded me of Rhino. Hitta J is a singles wrestler now after his brother moved, and his dad is his manager. His presence adds a lot to J’s act, as he’s an imposing dude with presence who carries a big stick (literally). Balderas and Hitta J spent a good bit of time trading endless strikes like Peter Griffin and The Chicken. Hitta J showcased a decent arsenal of power moves. Finally, J got taken down on a combo with Sweeper hitting a Russian legsweep and Balderas a spear. Balderas also busted out what I can describe best as a Vader bomb after jumping from rope to rope in the corner like a Best Moonsault Ever. I dig it, and it’s a nice bit of agility from a big dude. J’s manager, Dr. Kenneth Jones, broke up the pin by pulling his son’s foot into the ropes. Hitta J came back with a chokeslam on Balderas to claim the coin. This finish was fine in a vacuum and should play well enough in a separate episode of TV, but live, it fell flat coming immediately after the nunchuck use in the previous match.

Match 4: All Star Special vs. Noir

Noir are fan favorites now. I repeat, Ehren Black and Mr. Wright, the often reviled duo in Kraken, are fan favorites. No one prepared me for this. They really seemed to be savoring the crowd support, and I like Mr. Wright’s new haircut. Kraken fans don’t chant, except for a “Let’s go Noir” chant that broke out. What is happening?!? Huckaby and Hanson basically worked this one as heels. Hanson caught Wright with the ole knee in the back as he bounces off the ropes to help All Star Special take advantage. Black is even bigger than he looks on TV. Seeing him make a hot tag is a weather event. Things broke down, Huckaby scaled the ropes for a moonsault, and Black cut him off and delivered a choke bomb with a gnarly landing that legit rattled Huck. Noir won the match to advance to the Tides of War finals. The crowd loved it, and I remained thrown by the reaction.

Match 5: Angel del la Muerte vs. Kassius King

The masked luchador got the submission here with a pretty slick hold. I missed most of this one because my Wilford Brimley Spidey sense started tingling, and your favorite wrestling writer with an insulin issue needed to eat. Concession selection for something with protein was sparse. The only real offerings in that vein were boiled peanuts and jerky. Apparently the battle for a food license limits what they can have available, but a little wider selection would be appreciated.

Intermission 

This was an event all in itself, with several members of the roster working the room and hawking their merchandise. A giant group dance broke out with kids and wrestlers and ring announcer Kay Casiano. Sweeper was part of this and selling his hip while he danced, thus making a very fine offering to the wrestling gods.

Match 5: Josh Breezzyy vs. Travis Ray

Most Kraken matches are short by design. Every match on the card except the main event had a 10-minute time limit. Despite the relatively short time limit, nothing really felt rushed… except this match. I’ve already got some thoughts on Breezzyy in The Business coming in my next review on the Kraken archive, but this didn’t work for me.

Match 6: Saturday Night Temptations vs. The Business 

The other Tides of War semifinal. The match was just OK and got overshadowed by the simmering tension in The Business between manager Justin Kayse and Lamar Diggs and Jaz Jones. Diggs and Jones were none too pleased with the way the last event ended, with Kayse turning on Dominic Stuckey and aligning with Brother Azriel, who called his shot as Cash In Hand champion and challenged Stuckey on the spot right after he had won the Kraken Pro Title from Trever Aeon, who looks to be done in Kraken at least for the immediate future. Diggs and Kayse started bickering loudly from the minute they came through the curtain. Add the Temptations to the list of Kraken acts who have a very over ring entrance. CJ Shine and Karl Hager did some good crowd work with Hager’s hat, but The Business jumped them to cut off the shenanigans. Shine spent the majority of this match getting clobbered by The Business. When he did finally tag Hager, Diggs cut off the hot tag with a nice fallaway slam. More dissension between Diggs and Kayse. The ref took a tumble. Breezzyy ran out to interfere, and his superkick clocked Jaz in the face by mistake. The Temptations scored the tandem pin on Diggs, and also ended up with Kayse’s Georgia Wrestling History trophy, a beat that begged for a follow-up but Kayse had it right back for his appearance at the end of the night. I enjoyed the building discord in The Business, which is begging for an eventual climax with Diggs getting his hands on the manager. There’s a Faustian deal that has been made here, but is the devil in this case Kayse, the archvillain of Kraken? Or is Kayse Faust, who made moves and deals for power and influence and championships and now faces potentially brutal consequences for his choices?

Kraken GM Alex Chase is out with the tag titles and a faceoff between Noir and the Temptations. Black was very intense for this, and the crowd loved it.

Match 7: Vice Cream (Don Haylo & Jayy Wells) vs. Red Door (Charlie Kills & Jay 2 Strong)

Match of the night for me. Haylo and Wells have been personal favorites for a while, Jay is arguably the most reliable in-ring wrestler on the roster, and Charlie stands out with his character and tactics like joint manipulation and fish hooking that would warm the cockles of the heart of a World of Sport fan from the 1970s. They started hot with Vice Cream getting jumped. Haylo and Wells turn the tables and engage in an extended double team. I figure Diamond Duke was losing his mind on commentary during this. The crowd loves chops, and they got the nastiest one of the night from Wells, an incredibly nasty-sounding shot that both echoed and thudded, even with Jay wearing a shirt. Red Door end up working over Wells, who fired back but refused to tag out. “I got this!” he said to Haylo, but did he? He did not. A Strong Valley Driver by Jay 2 Strong finished it, and Haylo walked out without his partner.

Match 8: Xander King vs. ERC in Match 4 of their Best of 5

The main event, and the only match that had a longer time limit. ERC came in trailing 2-1 in the Best of 5, which telegraphed the result a good bit. Still a very solid back-and-forth match. King was on the very first few episodes of Kraken and did not impress. He was much better here, and I told him so after the show concluded. ERC stands out in Kraken as a sneaky, crafty wrestler. I’ll have more to say on this one when I’ve watched the rest of the series. ERC delivered a modified gut buster to tie the Best of 5 going into the Kraken Classic.

Kraken Classic ceremony

The final announced thing on the card was a ceremony where the eight wrestlers in the Kraken Classic offered their coins as “admission” to the tournament. Just like weddings and contract signings in pro wrestling, this segment was destined for chaos. The Kraken Classic field includes Haylo, Whatley, Nick Quick, Breezzyy, Hitta J, Charlie Kills, Huck, and Joe Black. As expected, the wrestlers started to brawl. Huckaby and Breezzyy are the final two left standing when Justin Kayse and the rest of The Business came out, and Kayse asked Huckaby to leave. Huck did, which potentially could make him look weak, but much less so after he floored Breezzyy with a punch.

Kayse started ranting and raving about Breezzyy being a weak link, then wiped the paint off of his face using Breezzyy’s own shirt. He introduced his newest client, and the new Kraken Pro champ, Brother Azriel. Once Kayse described him as the new ace of The Business, Stuckey’s music hit to a huge reaction. This double turn from the last event definitely worked. The whole story feels like it’s been lifted from Memphis or Mid-South in their heyday as territories. Kayse ordered Diggs to take out Stuckey, but Diggs and Jaz walked out instead. The crowd loved this.

A quick aside to recognize how valuable Kay Casiano is as a host for Kraken. I consider her one of the five individuals that are the most valuable to the promotion. I’ve done ring announcing, and hosting on wrestling TV, and I’m not very good at either one. Kay has a consistent presence even when chaos is breaking out and brings a credible anchorwoman type presence. During this segment, there was a great beat where, as Kayse started to leave the ring, Kay snatched the microphone he left laying on the apron and handed it to Dom with a big smile.

Stuckey got his turn to talk and made the most of it. Kraken needed a big moment to put butts in seats for the Kraken Classic and Stuckey’s promo really sold it. He challenged Azriel for the title and there’s your the main event at the Kraken Classic.

The stage is set for a strong card to celebrate Kraken’s second anniversary:

Brother Azriel defending the Kraken Pro Title against Dominic Stuckey
Noir vs. Saturday Night Temptations in the Tides of War finals to crown the first Kraken Tag Champions
Xander King vs. ERC in the final match of the Best of 5
Two Kraken Classic four-way semifinals, and the one-on-one Kraken Classic final
The return of the Ultimate Cash in Hand Scramble

Solid.

This was a fun evening of wrestling that moved briskly. Nothing overstayed its welcome and there was only one match that really missed the mark, although I maintain the two back-to-back finishes in the triple threats fell flat because of their sequence, and the unnecessary second shot with the nunchucks. I was also a little disappointed that the one event that worked for our calendar didn’t have Azriel, Stuckey, or Kevin Kantrell in action.

Kraken is very lucky to have this building, which is, hands down, one of the nicest venues for an independent wrestling promotion that I have ever experienced, either as a fan or working as a commentator, announcer, or otherwise behind the scenes. The talent has a very nice backstage dressing room area, and there’s even a catering spread for them.

The venue provides abundant square footage. There’s air conditioning.

And the bathrooms.

I say again, with the full endorsement of my better half … the bathrooms, y’all!

This was probably my wife’s favorite feature of the venue. Independent wrestling leads you to pee in some pretty gross places, at times.

Thanks to Kraken Pro Wrestling for the hospitality.

And look for the next installment of Review the Kraken soon.