Lee Johnson and QT Marshall to engage in a feud resembling Larry Zbyszko – Bruno Sammartino from the 80s

Lee Johnson got his first pinfall on the February 10, 2021 episode of AEW Dynamite in a tag team match with Cody Rhodes against the team of “Pretty” Peter Avalon and Cezar Bonomi. Unfortunately, Cody Rhodes was injured in the match according to Arn Anderson. Johnson was given time to cut a promo after the match in which he thanked Cody, his wife Brandi (who is now pregnant) Dustin Rhodes, and Arn Anderson for training him as Lee is the newest member of The Nightmare Family.

What was somewhat peculiar about this segment was that QT Marshall was conveniently absent from this segment. Marshall had a major hand in training Lee Johnson, so one could conclude based on this that Johnson and Marshall could possibly engage in a feud in the coming months. Dave Meltzer has reported on Wrestling Observer Radio that Cody has been studying the Bruno Sammartino – Larry Zbyszko feud from the early 1980s as the framework off of which to orchestrate the puzzle pieces of the Johnson – Marshall story.

In the early 1980s, Bruno Sammartino was already a living legend in wrestling, while Larry Zbyszko was his protégé. Zbyszko got to a point where he was fed up with the situation and turned heel on Sammartino (who was well into his 40s at the time). It was Cody’s idea for Lee Johnson to play the role of Larry Zbyszko in the 2021 version of this story and for QT Marshall to play the role of Sammartino.

A more recent example of how this storyline between Lee Johnson and QT Marshall might turn out is the storyline in AEW back in late 2019 – early 2020 between Cody and MJF in which Cody served as a mentor to a young Maxwell Jacob Friedman. MJF threw in the towel for Cody in a match for the AEW World Championship against Chris Jericho (Le Champion at the time) at Full Gear in November 2019 when Maxwell was fully aware that Cody could never challenge for the title again if he lost. This disagreement between Cody and MJF led to a match between them at Revolution in February 2020, in which Cody unselfishly put over Maxwell Jacob Friedman.

Seth Rollins’ Journey through WWE, ROH and Other Promotions

Colby Lopez was trained by Danny Daniels and made his professional wrestling debut in 2005 at age 19 in the Iowa independent scene under the ring name Gixx but that was changed after just a few months to Tyler Black. The first major promotion he joined was NWA Midwest, where he won the tag team championship, and also made a one-off appearance in TNA in 2006. 2008 was the year when Black’s wrestling career legitimately got off the ground. In 2007, he began performing for Full Impact Pro (FIP) and won the promotion’s World Heavyweight Championship in December 2008, while also capturing the Pro Wrestling Guerrilla Tag Team Championship with Jimmy Jacobs.

Tyler Black was best known for his time with independent promotion Ring of Honor (ROH) before signing with WWE in 2010. He came to ROH in 2007 as part of the Age of the Fall stable, and their segment at ROH’s pay-Per-View in September 2007 was so controversial that the footage was removed from the event before it aired (the segment involved the hanging of Jay Briscoe with a “noose”).

Black and Jimmy Jacobs won the ROH World Tag Team Championship twice and spent much of 2008 with the titles. After getting several opportunities at the ROH World Championship in 2008 and 2009, Black won the 2009 Survival of the Fittest Tournament, thus giving him one more match for the title. At Final Battle 2009 – ROH’s first live Pay-Per-View – Tyler Black wrestled Austin Aries to a 60-minute time limit draw. Because of this, the commissioner at the time Jim Cornette booked a rematch between the two men, then another in which Black finally captured the ROH World Championship in early 2010.

He was champion for 210 days until he left ROH for WWE and posted seven successful title defenses. Black signed with WWE in August 2010 and debuted the following month as Seth Rollins. His first major feud with Dean Ambrose was orchestrated in 2011, which planted some early seeds for the formation of The Shield about a year later. Rollins entered the Gold Rush Tournament to determine the first NXT Champion after FCW was rebranded to NXT in August 2012 (led by Jim Ross among others). He defeated Jinder Mahal in the finals of the tournament on August 29, 2012 to become the first ever NXT Champion. What was perhaps most impressive about that title reign was that Rollins was able to continue to defend the title even while simultaneously making a name for himself on the main roster with The Shield. He finally dropped the NXT title to Big E Langston in January 2013.

Dean Ambrose, Seth Rollins, and Roman Reigns made their debut on the WWE main roster in November 2012 at Survivor Series. What is so ironic is that Ambrose was originally the leader, yet he is the only one not with the company presently. The Shield had their first match on the main roster at TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs 2012 in a victory over Daniel Bryan and Kane (Team Hell No) and Ryback. Each member of The Shield won titles while the group was together and they won both WrestleMania matches as a stable. Their most significant rivalry came during their final months together as a group when they engaged in a rivalry with the recently reformed Evolution (Triple H, Randy Orton and Batista).

In fairness, a few months before that there was also a fantastic six-man tag match between The Shield and The Wyatt Family. Rollins turned on his Shield brothers on the June 2, 2014 episode of Monday Night Raw and won the Money in the Bank ladder match shortly after that with assistance from Kane. In October 2014 Rollins delivered a memorable performance with Dean Ambrose inside (and outside) Hell in a Cell; Seth delivered another incredible performance at Royal Rumble 2015 in a triple threat WWE World Heavyweight Championship match against Brock Lesnar and John Cena. A few months later in March 2015 at WrestleMania 31, Rollins became the first man to ever cash-in the Money in the Bank contract when he used it during the match between Roman Reigns and Brock Lesnar to turn it into a triple threat match and win the WWE World Heavyweight Championship (after Rollins had already participated in a match against Randy Orton earlier in the night).

Seth Rollins held the WWE World Heavyweight Championship for over seven months until he suffered a gruesome knee injury in which he pretty much blew out his entire knee at a house show for WWE in Dublin, Ireland on November 4, 2015 in a title match against Kane. He attended a sunset left into a buckle bomb which he has done religiously for years. Even though the title reign was cut short, it still did its job of ensuring that Rollins would be a pivotal part of the future of WWE. He headlined SummerSlam with John Cena and in the process became the first WWE superstar to hold the United States Championship and the WWE Championship simultaneously.

Rollins was treated well by the company in terms of booking on his return in 2016 and was the first overall pick in the 2016 WWE draft in July of that year. At SummerSlam in August, he was put in a match with the debuting Finn Balor to determine the first Universal Champion but was defeated in the match. A rivalry throughout the remainder of 2016 with Kevin Owens/Chris Jericho kept Rollins busy until a feud with Triple H was kickstarted to keep both men occupied through WrestleMania 33. Rollins defeated Triple H at Mania in 2017, which served as the payoff to the long history between both men as Triple H served as a mentor to Rollins since This Shield originally split in 2014.

The Shield reunited temporarily in 2017, and in February 2018 Rollins lasted over an hour in a gauntlet match on Monday Night Raw, earning him the longest performance in a match by any wrestler in the history of the program (since 1993). This was the official start of the Monday Night Rollins gimmick and he also pinned the top two superstars in WWE in Roman Reigns and John Cena. This gimmick lasted until January 2019 when Rollins won the Royal Rumble and set his sights on Brock Lesnar and the Universal Championship. 2018 for Rollins was good for multiple reigns with the Intercontinental Championship, however. He captured the Universal Championship from Brock Lesnar at WrestleMania 35.

The Beastslayter delivered a phenomenal match with AJ Styles at Money in the Bank in May 2019 before defeating Lesnar again at SummerSlam 2019 in August in Toronto, Canada. His next notable appearance came at Hell in a Cell in October against The Fiend in a match that was received very poorly. However, The Fiend managed to capture the Universal Championship a few weeks later at the Crown Jewel event in Saudi Arabia. After this losing of the title for Rollins, WWE recognized that the WWE universe was becoming disillusioned with his character, so the company decided to lean into it and present him in unlikable fashion after Survivor Series 2019. Seth Rollins began to call himself “The Monday Night Messiah” and formed a stable with AOP and Murphy.

Rollins and Murphy won the RAW Tag Team Championship (Rollins’ record sixth time holding the titles) in 2020 and the Monday Night Messiah engaged in a very personal rivalry with Kevin Owens which culminated at WrestleMania 36. The most memorable match he participated in during 2020 was a physical encounter with Drew McIntyre at Money in the Bank in May for the WWE Championship in which Rollins was unsuccessful. He took a hiatus in November after Survivor Series (in which he sacrificed himself “for the greater good”) to go on paternity leave with his fiancée Becky Lynch. Their first child, Roux, was born in December and The Messiah has just returned to SmackDown, where he was drafted in October 2020.

Perspective for Adam Pearce’s Journey

Starting in the summer 2020, Adam Pearce was promoted by WWE to be an on-screen authority figure. In that role, the single biggest storyline he has been a part of is one starting in January 2021 with Roman Reigns and Paul Heyman which is still playing out to a certain degree. Pearce has made a few other sporadic on-screen appearances for WWE since 2018 and has served as a trainer/producer with the company since 2013.

He first worked as a guest coach and trainer for WWE in December 2013. Pearce made several more appearances for WWE in the same role throughout 2014 and worked as a producer on WWE’s NXT Takeover: R Evolution event in December of that year, making him the first unsigned independent contractor to produce live WWE programming. This marked a major shift for the company in terms of its willingness to get involved with other talent not necessarily contracted with WWE. Pearce began working with the company in 2013 but was not hired as a full-time trainer/producer until 2015.

Prior to WWE, Adam Pearce carved out a fantastic 18-year career for himself in professional wrestling from 1996 – 2014. He made appearances for promotion all throughout the world, including in TNA and Mexico, but most notably won the NWA World Heavyweight Championship five times with the National Wrestling Alliance between 2006 and 2014. Pearce also won the NWA British Commonwealth Heavyweight Championship as well as the NWA Heritage Championship from Sean Waltman (X-Pac) on two different occasions in 2006 – 2007. He was also inducted into the NWA Hall of Fame in 2015, a crowning achievement.

He served as the head booker for Ring of Honor (ROH) for a couple years when he was signed to the company from 2005 – 2010. This experience gave Pearce a wealth of experience that has served him very well – he also gained the largest amount of exposure from a television perspective to an extremely wide audience, so his time in ROH was valuable. Pearce additionally made his New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) in 2005 and made an appearance in the Tokyo Dome.

One final major independent promotion Adam Pearce made a significant impact for is Pro Wrestling Guerilla (PWG). He became their second ever world champion, winning the title in February 2004 from Frankie Kazarian and losing the title to the same man that same year in July. He also made several appearances for the WWF between 1997 – 1999 as an enhancement talent being noticed by Terry Taylor.

Unfortunately, Taylor moved to WCW shortly after that and Pearce was contacted by Paul Orndorff. After attending the WCW Power Plant several times for tryouts and being offered a developmental deal with WCW, Pearce declined claiming that it was not a viable option for him to move to Atlanta. This may have been true but he also claimed later that the management and booking strategy within WCW seemed “disorganized and chaotic”– which may be somewhat true as many others have said the exact same thing, not that it matters anymore because that company has not existed for 20 years.

He also worked for Bert Kapitzke’s Alternative Wrestling Show (AWS) in Southern California. He became the head booker of the promotion and this was the first time Pearce was awarded the opportunity to book matches for any promotion, even before ROH. AWS improved dramatically as far as attendance was concerned, and a large part of that was due to the booking decisions made during that period by Pearce.

Looking back, it’s a miracle that Pearce was able to forge a career in professional wrestling at all, because even though he was a standout baseball and football player in high school, he suffered from Acute Muscular Compartment Syndrome in both of his lower legs and underwent surgery. As a result he had to “pretty much learn how to walk all over again” and stopped playing sports. During his time not playing sports he met Sonny Rogers and Randy Ricci, who ended up training Pearce in professional wrestling. In hindsight, this syndrome for Pearce back in the day might be looked at as the best thing that ever happened to him because it spelled out that baseball nor football was the right career path, and professional wrestling was. It simply showed Adam the right career path.

The APA have blazed a Similar Career Trajectory to that of The New Day

John “Bradshaw” Layfield grew up in Sweetwater, Texas, and was a pretty damn good football player at Abilene Christian University in the same state as well as becoming a coach for the football team at Trinity Valley community college. For a brief period, Layfield attempted to pursue an NFL career by signing with the Los Angeles Raiders before the 1990s season but was released before the regular season started. He began pursuing a career in professional wrestling in 1992 and made it to WWF in 1995.

Bradshaw’s partner Ron Simmons (Faarooq) played college football at Florida State from 1977 – 1980 as a nose guard on the defensive line under Bobby Bowden (the greatest coach in program history). Simmons was considered at the time to be a huge victory in 1977 in the recruiting process. The Seminoles won back-to-back Orange Bowls in both Simmons’ junior and senior seasons at Florida State University.

Florida State posted a record of 39 – 8 in Simmons’ four seasons. Simmons also described Bobby Bowden as “a second father.” He finished in the top 10 in the voting for the Heisman Trophy in 1979 (Junior year) and his jersey number was retired by FSU in 1988. He was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 2008 and is in my mind easily one of the 3 – 5 greatest players in Florida State history, albeit I was not alive for it.

Ron Simmons had a brief career in the NFL, being selected by the Cleveland Browns in the sixth round of the 1981 NFL draft. He was affiliated with the Browns in 1981 and 1982 but never actually dressed for regular season games. Simmons also played for the Ottawa Rough Riders in 1981. He subsequently left for the USFL’s Tampa Bay for three seasons from 1983 – 1985. During this time, Lex Luger was on the roster and seriously contemplating going into wrestling, and this planted a seed in Simmons’ mind. When his five-year football career was finished, he decided to follow Luger’s trail and legitimately try to get into wrestling as well.

Simmons started his professional wrestling career in 1986 in Jim Crockett Promotions/WCW, and the biggest moment of his entire career there was on August 2, 1992 when he won the WCW World Heavyweight Championship from Big Van Vader and became the first African-American world champion in professional wrestling history (the tag team Doom with Butch Reed, who recently passed away, a few years before that was also pretty popular).

Ron Simmons made it to the WWF in 1996 and was given the name Faarooq, which he was skeptical at first but made it work. He was assigned to The Nation of Domination as the leader, but the role of the leader of the group quickly was turned over to The Rock (who was Rocky Maivia before being assigned to the group by WWE creative). The Nation of Domination storyline was a thing until 1998 and the idea for the group was based largely on the Nation of Islam as well as the Black Panther Party which was popularized during the Vietnam War.

Being kicked out of The Nation of Domination in favor of The Rock as the leader was ironically the greatest thing that ever happened to Farooq as he was paired with John “Bradshaw” Layfield. The two men developed incredible chemistry together as the APA lasted as a tag team until 2004. Each man developed legitimate love and caring for the other which is a beautiful thing. Farooq was nearing the end of his career at 46 years old by the time the team split in ‘04, but JBL went on to win the WWE Championship in 2004 and hold the title for 280 days, which was a SmackDown record at the time (that has since been broken by AJ Styles).

The mutual love and respect Ron Simmons and JBL have for one another is reminiscent of the relationship The New Day members have currently. Both teams worked together for six years, and both teams are best friends in real life. Fans legitimately can feel intuitively/energetically how the members of a tag team feel about each other and whether they have mutual respect between one another, and these two teams do.

There are generational differences – for example, the APA were part of an era that wholeheartedly embraced the idea of men being rugged/rough around the edges, and they were the perfect example of that image. The New Day is part of a generation that is a little softer in terms of this – it’s not necessarily bad, just very different. One similarity, however, is the amount of love and respect between the two teams which is ultimately the intangible glue that is never going to go out of style no matter the values that are embraced across different generations.

Kevin Steen (Kevin Owens) has experienced the Bulk of his Success in Wrestling in PWG, ROH, and WWE but…

Owens has also won championships in other promotions such as IWS in Canada and All American Wrestling (AAW).

Kevin Steen was born in 1984 and grew up in Marieville, Québec, Canada. He was trained by Terry Taylor as his primary trainer as well as a few other people like Jacques Rougeau. He made his professional wrestling debut in 2000 on his 16th birthday. Kevin’s first language was French, and the way he learned English was by mimicking everything he heard on Monday Night Raw. He was inspired by the WrestleMania XI match between Shawn Michaels and Diesel for the WWF (at the time) Championship, and that is what finally caused the epiphany in his mind and the realization of “I want to do this for a living.” This is the story according to Kevin.

Steen wrestled for Jacques Rougeau’s wrestling promotion for the first several years of his career until he started to get his career off the ground. When he (sort of) graduated from his trainer’s promotion, he signed with IWS (International Wrestling Syndicate) based out of Montréal in 2003 and stayed there until 2009, establishing his footing within the industry. There were also stints in Combat Zone Wrestling (CZW) from 2004 – 2006, 2008, and 2014.

Kevin Steen achieved most of his success in wrestling pre-WWE in Ring of Honor (ROH) from 2007 – 2014 and in Pro Wrestling Guerilla (PWG, Excalibur of AEW is one of the founders). He held the ROH World Championship for the better part of 2012 as well as held the ROH World Tag Team Championship on one occasion throughout his seven-year tenure with the company. Steen has held the PWG world championship a record three times as well as the PWG World Tag Team Championship three times. Based on these metrics, Kevin experienced more success in PWG across two separate stints from 2005 – 2008 and 2010 – 2014.

For his entire career until signing with WWE in 2014, he wrestled under his biological name – Kevin Steen – before changing the name to Kevin Owens for WWE. His son was named Owen after the late Owen Hart. Owens has experienced great success in WWE as a former NXT Champion in 2015, a former Universal Champion in 2016 – 17, a two-time Intercontinental Champion as well as a three-time United States Champion. Kevin’s most prominent WWE storyline came in 2016 – 17 when he was Universal Champion, but more importantly than that the storyline with Chris Jericho and their friendship caught fire.

“The List” became the most talked about phenomenon in the company, as Jericho appeared on ESPN and was asked about it constantly. Owens told a deeper story that resonated with the WWE universe again in 2020 leading to WrestleMania with Seth Rollins by incorporating each man’s history in the WWE Performance Center. The Messiah does not have a whole lot because he got started in WWE for the most part before the PC was built in 2013 as he debuted on the main roster in 2012.

The WWE universe is aware that Kevin Owens is not afraid of heights and he has no second thought when it comes to jumping off any surface no matter how high. The most recent example of this was at Royal Rumble 2021 in which he jumped off a forklift onto Roman Reigns. Another example occurred at WrestleMania 36 when he jumped off the WrestleMania sign onto Seth through the announce table.

Kevin was thinking about jumping off the pirate ship at Raymond James Stadium when he heard Mania would take place there last year, but it got moved to the WWE Performance Center. Now that WrestleMania 37 is set to emanate from the stadium in 2021, Owens will have the opportunity to make good on his promise by jumping off the pirate ship in the venue.

Penta El Zero M currently Suffering from a Leg Injury

Rey Fenix has been receiving a much bigger spotlight than normal in singles action in recent months because his legitimate brother and tag team partner Penta El Zero Miedo suffered a leg injury in training back in November 2020. Penta was put through the timekeeper’s table by The Butcher in a six-man tag match in November and has been out ever since. As it turns out, he was purposely removed from the match to write him off TV for the time being so he could nurse his leg injury back to health, which Penta suffered a few months ago.

Fortunately, as of now the injury does not appear to serious, and Penta El Zero M is expected to return to AEW Dynamite within a few weeks. In the meantime, Rey Fenix, who is 5.5 years younger, is proving what a commodity he can be in the singles division. Most notably, Fenix delivered a fantastic match with AEW World Champion Kenny Omega for the title on the December 30, 2020 episode of Dynamite (which was also the night of the tribute episode to the late Brodie Lee – incredible human being).

Personally, I was first introduced to both Pentagon Jr. and Feniz in 2015 when they were both members of the promotion Lucha Underground. The two brothers were a tag team and occasionally competed in singles matches, but it was blatantly obvious that they were both more than talented enough and charismatic enough to sustain their characters individually. Both men have done a great job throughout their careers of establishing their own nuances within the confines of their tag team.