Hidden gems: The 6 best non-WrestleMania matches from WrestleMania 41 week

Hidden gems: The 6 best non-WrestleMania matches from WrestleMania 41 week

WrestleMania weekend isn’t just about the big show. For the past decade or so, it has also served as a wrestling fans convention, with dozens of smaller indie shows putting their best foot forward to capture the ‘Mania-consuming masses. The WWE has a specific vision of professional wrestling — it is a popular vision, but not the only vision. Fortunately, the menagerie of various WrestleMania week shows do a great job of showing all of the different colors in the pro-wrestling pallet.

Here are the six best matches you may have missed over the WrestleMania 41 week festivities in Las Vegas.

Shinya Aoki vs. Charlie Dempsey: Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport (April 17)

Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport events are no-ropes shows that follow in the tradition of Japanese shoot-style wrestling promotions like UWF, UWFI and RINGS. In recent years they have booked wrestlers from multiple promotions, including rare indie dates for WWE stars — in addition to Charlie Dempsey, this past week’s show had Nattie Neidhart, Karmen Pertrovic, Karrion Kross, Pete Dunne, Tavion Heights and Shayna Bayzler.

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Dempsey is the son of WWE legend William Regal, a current NXT star, and one of the best grapplers in U.S. pro-wrestling, adapting the British catch-wrestling style of his father and Billy Robinson.

Aoki is an MMA legend, one of the great submission grapplers of all time. He has dipped his toe in professional wrestling over the past couple of years, mainly for the DDT promotion, while still being an active fighter. This past week was his debut as a professional wrestler in America.

This match had some of the coolest grappling you are going to see in modern pro-wrestling. Aoki is a leglock master, winning innumerable fights over the years that way, and it was cool to see him apply that technique with Dempsey somehow plausibly countering it with old-fashioned pro-wrestling, like a figure-four attempt or Indian death lock. There is a ground fight near the end of the match which starts with a Dempsey Bridging Indian Death lock and just flows into a calf slicer, then into a banana split, then into a toe hold — just breathtaking stuff.

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It really feels like an early MMA fight between masters of very different disciplines — jiu-jitsu versus British Blackpool carnival grappling.

With all of the politics of professional wrestling, this kind of NXT vs. One Championship MMA fever-dream match could really only happen at WrestleMania weekend.

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