The SWA is the Shropshire Wrestling Alliance, who run shows (unsurprisingly) in the Shropshire area. I saw on Twitter they were having a DVD sale, and picked up this interesting looking show. It turned out to be very good.
Damian Dunne vs Mark Andrews
This is for Dunne’s British Lions title. Dunne is working
heel here, which he’s really good at, throwing in nice little touches like
forcing Andrews to clap hands whilst in a hammerlock. Andrews is the quicker of
the two, and when he starts to use his speed, he’s able to take control, which
in turn forces Dunne to slow the pace down. So whilst Andrews uses a quick
standing moonsault in his offence, Dunne prefers to choke his opponent over the
ropes, as well as nailing his ever-sweet kneedrop (honestly, Dunne might have
the best kneedrop in BritWres). I enjoyed the story they told here, which was
simple yet effective: Andrews always has the advantage when they speed things
up, so Dunne will cut off his offensive flurries at any opportunity. Dunne gets
a backcracker for two, before Andrews is able to rebound. He hits a top rope
rana and a standing shooting star press for two. Dunne gets two when he catches
a springboarding Andrews with a spear for two. Looked great. Dunne brings his
title belt in, which the referee stops him using. However, this seems to have
been Dunne causing a distraction, as he punts Mandrews down below unseen, and
rolls him up for the win. Great opener
Sebastian Radclaw vs Marshall X vs Robert Rochester Rose
Interesting mix of characters, with Marshall being a white
wannabe gangster, Rose being an aristocratic snob and Radclaw being a unique
oddball. Radclaw is accompanied by Skat Monkey, his frankly ugly looking
puppet, and Marshall decides he wants the Monkey. Not for any real reason, but
to bully the naïve Radclaw. The two heels gang up on Radclaw and wear him down.
I loved Marshall X filming the beatdown on his mobile happy-slapping style.
Rose is a big lad, but some of his blows looked a bit milky, especially the
elbows to Radclaw’s head. The two-on-one beatdown continues with Marshall
hitting a nice double-underhook suplex. Eventually, the heels union dissolves when
Rose is the first one to try a pinfall on Radclaw, to the chagrin of X. This argument
gives Radclaw time to recover, and he springboards in with a nice rolling
clothesline. Radclaw hits a nice split legged moonsault on X, and rolls up the charging Rose for the victory. Good fun.
The Vulture Squad vs Pete Dunne & Ryan Smile
The Vulture Squad consist of Chris Brookes and Nixon Newell,
so we’ve got an intergender aspect to this match. Pete Dunne is apparently in
the process of turning heel, which leads to an explosive start. Dunne cuts a
promo essentially saying that if Newall is in the match, she needs to be
prepared to be hit like a man…then blindsides her with a stiff forearm. Brookes
hurls Dunne into the crowd in response, only to get taken out by a Smile
plancha. Quite the start. Things slow down a touch, with the Squad working over
Smile, until Dunne cheapshots Newall from the apron. Dunne gets big heat by
viciously working over Newall, slamming her knees into the mat. Really nasty
looking stuff, and Nixon looks tougher for holding on and making the hot tag to
Brookes. Everything breaks down, and Dunne hits a vicious backbreaker and facebuster
to Newall for two. I loved Brookes sacrificing himself to absorb a corner
charge meant for Nixon, in part because it allowed a fresh Nixon to hit a big
tornado DDT and a Shining Wizard for a close two. Makes it a good strategic
move by Brookes. Dunne’s nasty side really helps the ending run look great.
First, I loved him catching Newall during Poetry In Motion and powerbombing her
onto the prone Brookes. Then, after a ref bump, he low blows Brookes and locks
a cloverleaf on Newall. Even though she makes the ropes, the ref being down
allows him to stomp on her until she releases the ropes and drag her back into
the middle for the tapout win. Just brutal heel aggression. Really well worked tag
match.
Joey Sanchez vs Marc Morgan
This was set up earlier in the night, with heel manager G
John Chase promising a mystery opponent for SWA champion Sanchez. Now, call me
cynical, but I’m always suspicious when a promotion is full of guys I’ve heard
of, but the champion is a complete unknown. Makes me worry that they’ve booked
some good talent in order to promote some no-mark they’ve made champion. So I’m
happy to eat my words and say this was a good little match. This was non-title,
so it’s always more than likely that the champion loses, but they did a fun job
of keeping the result in question. I liked Sanchez’s fire after Morgan did a
lot of stalling, going outside to hit him with some stiff shots. Some Chase
interference gave Morgan an opening and he worked over Sanchez’s left arm. I
dug him using Old School, ending with a leg drop to the arm, felt like a good
smug heel move. Morgan tried it again, however, and got caught, leading to
Sanchez hitting an enzuigiri to take control. Sanchez’s selling of the arm was
really good, firstly only hitting offense like superkicks that didn’t require
use of the limb, then not being able to lock in a sharpshooter due to the pain.
When he’s able to grit through it and lock in the hold, a distracted ref doesn’t
notice Davian Vayne enter to hit him with a low blow, leaving an opening for
Morgan to hit Soylet Green for the win. Surpassed my expectations, a pleasant
surprise.
Dan Moloney vs Edwards
So, with two unknown guys putting on a good bout, I had high
hopes for a match featuring a guy I like in Moloney against another guy I didn’t
know in Edwards. This…wasn’t so good. I enjoyed Moloney hiding in the crowd
during his entrance to ambush Edwards, but it went a bit downhill following
that with some sloppy brawling on the outside. Edwards in particular didn’t
look particularly impressive here. Back inside the ring, Edwards hits an
admittedly decent uranage and a swanton, but Moloney no-sold right away and hit
a monster clothesline for the win.
Tyler Bate vs Jay Lethal
This is for the RoH TV title, so the result is never really
in doubt, but this is one heck of a match. I’m no big fan of Jay Lethal, he
seems to fill too much space in matches with your-turn-my-turn strike exchanges
(which happens three separate times here), but he was a good match for Bate
here. I saw Lethal one year previously taking on another 18yr old in Robbie X,
and the difference between Lethal’s muscular frame and the less in-shape Robbie
made those strike exchanges feel very unbalanced. Bate, however, is in very
good shape, stocky and with a big European uppercut that makes him competitive
against Lethal. Tyler was ON IT from the bell here, catching an unsuspecting
Lethal with a superkick and a dive to show he meant business. Lethal threw in
some fun bits, loved his crucifix surfboard on Bate. The commentary team raise
a good point about it being easier for Bate to scout Lethal than vice-versa,
with Bate proving this by countering the Lethal Cutter into an airplane spin
(with an insane number of rotations). Bate also got to hit a few of his great
strength spots, reversing a Lethal suplex into a deadlift one of his own, while
later hitting a lovely German suplex for two. The end to this was so heated, as
Bate hits an insane running backflip out of the ring onto Lethal, throws him in
the ring to try a corkscrew moonsault, but misses and is left prone for the
winning Lethal Cutter. Fantastic match, the crowd were into it every step of
the way and surround the ring, banging the apron in appreciation at the end.
Splendid stuff.
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