The career of Sami Zayn has seen lots of changes in recent months, but one thing that has remained with him is his finishing move. The Helluva Kick, a running Yakuza Kick with his opponent prone in the turnbuckle, earned its name through a happenstance of mispronunciation, WCW magazine, Denny’s and one of AEW’s lead commentators.
Ahead of his main event match with Roman Reigns at Elimination Chamber last month, Sami shared how his version of the Yakuza Kick earned its name, for the first time ever, with Love Wrestling.
“If you want the actual history here, I don’t know if I’ve ever actually told it in an interview.” Sami begins. “When I was a kid, I had a WCW magazine, and I was reading some match results. It said Chris Jericho defeated Syxx – or maybe it was the other way around – with a hell of a kick.
It was written “helluva” like that, and I thought it was a Helluva kick, so I thought it was a type of kick.”
It wasn’t until he shared this anecdote with a peer that Sami’s Yakuza Kick would earn the variant name. “So I told this story to Excalibur, who now does commentary on AEW every Wednesday. I told this story to him at dinner one time at Denny’s after a PWG show, then we started calling the running Yakuza kick in the corner that I would do at the time, we started calling it a Helluva kick. So that’s actually the real history of that name.”
Sami also shared his thoughts on returning to Montréal, Laura Jane Grace of Against Me, and Sami For Syria. Tune in to the full video interview below, and please give a h/t to Zak Ralph for the transcription.
Check more of Love Wrestling’s interviews from the Elimination Chamber junket, including conversations with Natalya, on YouTube
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For the past week, speculation has run rampant as to who would be challenging TBS Champion Jade Cargill when All Elite Wrestling debuted in Winnipeg. On the latest edition of AEW: Dynamite, Cargill announced a Canadian Open Challenge, hoping to take on one of the best that the country had to offer in her latest title defense.
Well, she certainly received it. The challenger? None other than Nicole Matthews.
Matthews, one of the standard-bearers of Canadian professional wrestling for the past decade, has recently been appearing for Love Pro Wrestling, Nation Extreme Wrestling, WrestleCore, and a number of other promotions through the Pacific North West.
Recently, Matthews made her return to the United States with DEFY Wrestling. Shortly after, the multi-time champion announced that she would be taking American bookings for the first time in nearly five years.
Damn, almost had her.
— Nicole Matthews (@nmatthewsninja) March 16, 2023
Post-match, Matthews commented on her AEW debut:
Matthews is currently scheduled to challenge Zoë Sager for the LPW Grand Championship on March 31st at LPW 13: Still Don’t Want to Grow Up.
All Elite Wrestling Announces Six-Show Canadian Tour, Forbidden Door PPV
All Elite Wrestling has announced a six-show tour throughout Canada, scheduled through June and July 2023.
The tour, set to take place in Toronto, Hamilton, Edmonton, Calgary, Saskatoon, and Regina, will kick off on Sunday, June 25th with the second-ever Forbidden Door Pay-Per-View, featuring a crossover between AEW and the legendary New Japan Pro Wrestling.
“Canada has a rich wrestling heritage, and our debut in Toronto last year served as a special moment in our incredible relationship with fans throughout the country,” stated AEW CEO, GM, and Head of Creative Tony Khan in a release earlier today. “Now, we’re not only entering new markets but also paying homage to the history of Canadian wrestling with unique moments like AEW House Rules taking place from the iconic Calgary Stampede. This summer is shaping up to be massive with the return of Forbidden Door, and now Canadian fans in six separate markets will get the chance to witness what AEW has to offer up close and personal.”
Tickets for the events will go on sale on March 17th for Calgary specifically, with the remainder of dates on sale on March 24th.
- Sunday, June 25th: Toronto, Ontario (Forbidden Door PPV)
- Wednesday, June 28th: Hamilton, Ontario (AEW: Dynamite & AEW: Rampage)
- Wednesday, July 5th: Edmonton, Alberta (AEW: Dynamite & AEW: Rampage)
- Wednesday, July 12th: Saskatoon, Saskatchewan (AEW: Dynamite)
- Friday, July 14th: Regina, Saskatchewan (AEW: Rampage)
- Saturday, July 15th: Calgary, Alberta (AEW: House Rules)
Just under two years ago, Raquel Rodriguez claimed her first singles championship in WWE, capturing the NXT Women’s Championship from Io Shirai at NXT TakeOver: Stand and Deliver. Just days later, Rodriguez – then known as Raquel Gonzalez – made her first live appearance as champion on the post-WrestleMania edition of NXT. In a heartwarming moment, Rodriguez was surprised by two fellow brand-new champions in Bianca Belair and Rhea Ripley. Both Ripley and Belair had captured their own respective championships at WrestleMania 37, and fittingly, all three women celebrated their title wins together.
Rodriguez, in an interview with Love Wrestling prior to Elimination Chamber, revealed that the reunion was far from an intricately-planned affair.
“Honestly, there was not a lot of planning from that!” Rodriguez laughed. “It was kind of just a moment, I think where everyone realized three girls that kind of came up in NXT together, they trained together, they’ve worked together, they’ve kind of all been on like the same system, in a sense. Now, all three of them are champions. Oh my god, we got to make a moment out of it! That’s what it felt like to me! Then, even in the moment that it was happening, because I showed up that day after winning the NXT Women’s Championship, and then watching Rhea win, in person, her Women’s Championship and Bianca, too, coming with her SmackDown Women’s Championship, it was like, ‘Oh, my God, all three of us are champions right now!’ When we all have that moment in the ring, and we look back at a picture of us tagging together, we’re just like, ‘wow, that was like, years ago!
Now look at us!’ It’s just so serendipitous to kind of see.”
The photo in question, pictured below, was a surprise to all of the competitors, said Rodriguez.

“No, I don’t think anybody knew [about the photo],” stated the former WWE Women’s Tag Team Champion. “What’s funny is that that was just literally one weekend we had, maybe years, maybe a year or two ahead of when we all won the title. For us, it was a weekend that we were out on the road. We were working these road loops that we do every weekend, and we didn’t put two and two together that oh my god, one day, this tag team that we have formed this weekend could potentially be the women’s champions of WWE, the triple threat!
“
“Just being associated with them in that scenario, and especially just getting to be a part of that group: Bianca Belair, the EST, Rhea Ripley, Mami, who’s just indestructible. It’s just really cool to know that I fit into that category with two powerful women like them.
“
Tune in to the full-length interview on Love Wrestling. Please credit Spencer Love with any of the above transcribed quotes.
Mat Rats, the fledgling promotion run by Teddy Hart, is one of the great ‘what-if’ stories in professional wrestling. In spite of its short run, Mat Rats consisted of some of the most talented young wrestlers in the country, including TJ Wilson, Harry Smith, Jack Evans, and more. Not only was the promotion set to be produced by former WCW booker Eric Bischoff, but was set to run on MTV. Though the promotion never got off the ground, its impact on the Canadian, and worldwide, wrestling scene is immense.
One individual who got their start in Mat Rats was none other than Natalya Neidhart. Beginning with the promotion as a ring announcer, Natalya was surrounded from the start of her career by a veritable who’s-who of the Canadian wrestling scene.
“Mat Rats was so crazy because it was something that was just thrown at us,” Natalya stated. “It was like ‘Eric Bischoff’s producing the show with Jason Hervey and they want to make this for MTV. It’s gonna be like wrestling and rock concert joined together.’ That’s actually where my cousin – I worked with TJ [Wilson], Harry [Smith], and my cousin Ted [Hart] and Jack Evans. Rene Dupree was in it. Mauro Ranallo was in it. I’m just trying to think who else was in it. We had a whole bunch of different people in it.
“
Natalya continued, stating that not only was that where she learned the inner workings of professional wrestling but her first move, too.
“They were like ‘Natty should do a move,'” she began. “The very first wrestling move that I ever learned was a dragonrana, which is like a front flip onto somebody’s shoulders into a hurricanrana. I never even knew how to do a headlock! That was the first move I learned. It was so much fun doing Mat Rats.”
In spite of the presence of future industry legends, Mat Rats unfortunately never earned its place on MTV, and now is simply looked back on fondly by all involved.
“Of course, it never really got off the ground,” Natalya lamented. “But, it was just a really cool chance for us as kids. My husband and I were on that together.
It was a good chance for us as kids to see what it was like to work for a big set. It wasn’t just like a small independent show. There was cameras and there was TV angles, and there was monitors, and people backstage, and producers, and directors, and it was just like it was cool. I felt like I was on a movie.”
Tune in to the full video interview below, and please give a h/t to Spencer Love for the transcription.
The beards are here! This week, Mr. J joins your favourite bearded duo to review AEW Revolution, discuss WrestleMania rumours, and navigate a run-in from the RADz own TY Jackson!
Like, share, subscribe, and most importantly, tune in to each and every episode of Between Two Beards, every Thursday at 8pm ET!
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Love Pro Wrestling returned to the Rec Room South Edmonton on February 24th for LPW 12: Streets Ahead, featuring Zoë Sager’s first-ever defence of the LPW Grand Championship, the debut of Se7en, and the crowing of a brand-new Challenge Champion. Full results below!
RESULTS
- LPW Challenge Championship (Vacant): Son of Irish def. Michael Richard Blais – New Champion!
- Se7en (Jack Pride, TJ Cannon, Marz the Specialist) w/ Thaddeus Archer the Third def. Eli Surge, Elliot Tyler, and Tony Baroni
- Liiza Hall def. Kenneth Stryker
- Scramble Match: Berat Gorani def. Sheik Shabaz, Evan Rivers, and Reid Matthews
- The RADz (Rich King, Lumberjack Larry Woods, and TY Jackson) w/ Judge Ben Oomen def. Michael Allen Richard Clark, Sebastian Wolfe, and Miles Deville
- LPW Grand Championship Match: Zoë Sager def. Steven Crowe
Current LPW Champions
LPW Grand Champion: “The Intangible” Zoë Sager
LPW Challenge Champion: Son of Irish
LPW Tag Team Champions: The RADz (Rich King & Lumberjack Larry Woods)
Cast & Crew
Referees: Mike “The Fitz” Fitzpatrick, Stewart Garvey
Commentary: Big Bad Boris, Thaddeus Archer the Third
Production: Thomas Hughes, Gavin Fitzpatrick, Dustyn Devos, Ian Tidswell
Upcoming Events
Love Pro Wrestling returns to the Rec Room South Edmonton for a pair of events in March!
LPW X CWS | March 30th | https://bit.ly/3Z4eQbe
LPW 13: Still Don’t Want to Grow Up | March 31st | https://bit.ly/3xIvCAF
With appearances for the WWE, All Elite Wrestling, and the NWA under her belt, Jazmin Allure has quickly become one of the hottest prospects in all of professional wrestling. Last year, the now-23-year-old independent star signed her first contract in pro wrestling, choosing to commit to Women of Wrestling for the foreseeable future. Since signing with the promotion, Allure, known in W.O.W as Jennifer “Jen-Z” Florez, has had the opportunity to work with some of the biggest names in professional wrestling, including WWE legend AJ Mendez, formerly known as AJ Lee. In a recent interview with Love Wrestling, Allure gave some insight into her relationship with the wrestling legend, and her decision to sign with W.O.W as a whole.
“When I heard they were coming back, and I heard AJ was a part of it, I was like, ‘wow, this is gonna be really good,'” Allure stated when asked about her mentor. “I, at first, was kind of like, oh my god, they’re very character [based] and like, gimmicky and all that stuff, and I’m kind of not. I’, more of a wrestler-wrestler.
But, when AJ contacted me, she was like, ‘I think you’d be great for this.’ I was like, ‘I can’t say no to her!
‘ “
Not only was Mendez a deciding factor in Allure’s decision to sign with Women of Wrestling, but has become a mentor of sorts for the 23-year-old star.
“My godmother, I call her,” laughed Allure. “She’s my godmother because she made my dream come true! She gave me the first contract. She brought me to W.O.W. But she’s like a mother to me. She tells me when she sees me training, she’s like, where are your elbow pads? Wear your elbow pads, you don’t want to have that elbows like me! The first training she saw me, my elbow started bleeding from the mat burn. She’s like, ‘What did I tell you? Wear your elbow [pads]! She’s just like a mother, and she gives great advice.
When we’re at W.O.W., she watches my matches and afterward, she’ll give me critiques and stuff like that.”
Tune in to the full interview below for more from Allure on her training with Thunder Rosa, appearances for AEW, WWE, the NWA, and more!
Women of Wrestling star. Trained under Thunder Rosa and Jazz. Some know her as Jennifer Florez. Jasmin Allure is here! You’d be hard-pressed to find a major promotion that Jazmin Allure HASN’T worked for at this point! Signed to Women of Wrestling and with appearances for WWE, AEW, and the NWA under her belt, Allure’s quickly become not just a rising star on the independent scene, but a star, period! Tune in as she chats with Spencer Love about her meteoric rise in pro wrestling, signing with W.O.W, taking on the likes of Lacey Evans, Thunder Rosa, Kamille, and more, advice from AJ Lee, the character-based nature of WOW, and more!
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On her relationship with AJ Mendez, fka AJ Lee
“So with Jazz and Thunder [Rosa], they trained me. They physically trained me. AJ is more
like my mother. My godmother, I call her. She’s my godmother, because she made my dream
come true! She gave me the first contract. She brought me to W.O.W. But she’s like a
mother to me. She tells me when she sees me training, she’s like, where are your elbow
pads? Wear your elbow pads, you don’t want to have that elbows like me!
The first training
she saw me, my elbow started bleeding from the mat, like the mat burn. She’s like, ‘What did
I tell you? Wear your elbow [pads]! She’s just like a mother, and she gives great advice.
When we’re at W.O.W., she watches my matches and afterwards, she’ll give me critiques
and stuff like that.”
Choosing to sign with W.O.W
“When I heard they were coming back, and I heard AJ was a part of it, I was like, ‘wow, this
is gonna be really good.’ I, at first, was kind of like, oh my god, they’re very character [based]
and like, gimmicky and all that stuff, and I’m kind of not. I’, more of a wrestler-wrestler.
But,
when AJ contacted me, she was like, ‘I think you’d be great for this.’ I was like, ‘I can’t say no
to her!’ And, also, Women of Wrestling, I would watch that as well.
These woman kicking
ass, they’re so inspiring as well. And the locker room! Once I got there, everyone was so
nice. There’s no drama. It’s 40, I think 40 girls, plus. For that to be as great as it is, it’s
insane. It’s pretty awesome. We’re all so supportive, and it’s really great. The fact that AJ
brought me in, and getting to meet like David McLane, who owns it, it’s a pretty great
opportunity.”
Bronson Reed joins Zak Ralph of Love Wrestling to chat about his return to WWE, his tribute to Bam Bam Bigelow, Vader, unfinished business in WWE, and his thoughts on the 2023 WWE Hall of Fame!
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Bam Bam Bigelow
“I’m a huge Bam Bam fan. I love all the stuff he did in ECW. I think that was a bit of a different run for him. WWE-wise, I love the LT [Lawrence Taylor] main event he had WrestleMania. Now a lot of people might not put it up there as like a classic matchup, but Bam Bam was such a professional and so good at what he did that he made LT look like a million dollars. That’s something I’ve fond memories of as a kid. That and the whole flame attire and stuff!
He always stood out to me as a kid. So that was why I wanted to have that inspiration for the TakeOver gear that I had.”
Big Men in Wrestling
“Yeah, Vader is one of them. I was a big Vader fan. The stuff that he did in WCW, obviously here in WWE, but also all the stuff that he did in Japan. They’re probably the two I take away from most: Bam Bam Bigelow and Big Van Vader.
”
(continued) “I actually have one of [Vader’s] masks at home! His son actually sent me, which was really nice. He sent me as a gift one of his dad’s masks. So I have that at home. So maybe I could wear that at some point. I mean, I’d like to do the big Mastodon stuff.
That’s the that’s the goal! With the smoke and everything. That’d be awesome.

