Devon Moore vs Blake Morris
Just a swift little opener, goes
barely 5 minutes. Wasn’t a great Morris performance, he seemed a bit less
willing to lay it in than usual. I did like him stopping a Moore suicide dive
with a swift elbow to the face. The end looks pretty good too, as Moore dives
from the top into a Morris superkick for the win.
Willow Nightingale vs Sumie Sukai
I’ll be honest, I was slightly
apprehensive about this match when I realised it was 17 minutes long. After
all, I’d not been massively impressed by Nightingale in her match with J-Redd
on the last show and, whilst I used to think Sukai was really good, it had been
about 11 years since I’d last seen her in action and I wasn’t sure if she’d
still be any good. As it turns out, I needn’t have worried. Sukai puts in a
terrific performance, attacking Nightingale before the bell and heeling it up
from that moment on. Sukai doesn’t give Willow a chance to rest with her
heeling, making the most of every referee count and only breaking at 4, then
immediately staying on the attack. Sukai is pretty nasty, fish-hooking Willow
on a Camel Clutch, then grinding her wrist tape into the eyes. Loved her
telling the referee to check for a submission, then using the distraction to
bite Willow’s fingers. There is a notable size difference, with Sukai being
tiny and Nightingale being well-built, so it’s impressive that Sukai makes
Willow feel like an underdog. When Nightingale goes on offence, I like that she
utilises her size advantage, putting on a Boston crab that looks like it’s breaking
Sukai in half. Her offence is a bit weak in places, but her spinebuster looks
great and her cannonball in the corner feels like it’d crush Sukai. The end is
a bit weak, as we get a time limit draw, but it comes at a time where neither
is really in control. It leaves it feeling pretty unresolved.
Milk Chocolate (Brandon
Watts/Randy Summers) vs Private Party (Isiah Kassidy/Marq Quen)
Really like the Private Party
gimmick, two VIP party boys, who take a pre-match shot and have a large
bodyguard. Quen also has enjoyably ludicrous hair, and they’re very convincing
in the role, posing cockily over the ropes. The bodyguard provides a
distraction to give Private Party control, with Summers the face-in-peril. This
is worked solidly to formula, with Milk Chocolate getting a few near tags
before Watts tags in. Loved his STO on the apron to Kassidy. Great spot as
Summers tries to send Kassidy over the top rope, only for Quen to block him on
the apron and backdrop his partner back into the ring for a tornado DDT. Milk
Chocolate win with a top rope stomp onto a draping DDT, which looks like it
should finish a match.
BLK Jeez vs Rex Lawless
Perfectly decent little midcard
match. Liked Jeez’s tactic of working over Lawless’s leg, trying to neutralise
the size advantage. Lawless has some soft looking offence for such a big guy,
though I did like his slingshot senton and his Finlay roll, so maybe he’s just
good at forward flips. Jeez hits a killer looking top rope stomp that should
end it, but Lawless hits a Baldo Bomb from nowhere to win.
Born & Bred (Anthony LaCerra
& Jessie Vane) vs the Benson Brothers
Enjoyed what I’d seen from both
teams previously, so was looking forward to this one. Born & Bred feel like
a really good team, really like the double-team offence from both that felt
like it flowed naturally. LaCerra hits some great rolling suplexes, they flowed
nicely and looked to have real snap to them. They work heat on Brad Benson, and
I really liked CJ’s work on the apron, working the crowd and motivating Brad by
reminding him this was for the tag titles. CJ is a lot of fun as a hot tag, an
energetic brawler. I’ve compared him to a surfer Jim Duggan previously, and I
think it holds true. Loved his double chokeslam on Born and Bred. Crappy ending
sees Private Party hit splashes on both teams to cause a double DQ, but the
meat of this was good.
Bull James vs Scott Norton
Very short bout, quite curiously
worked. Not sure if James has turned heel since winning the title, or if this
was a one-time thing, but he cheapshotted Norton during a pre-match arm
wrestle, then hit a top rope seated splash, before picking up Norton on the two
count. Norton is obviously past his prime, but due to his size and demeanour,
he still carries himself as a threat, and his offence looks nice and stiff.
James also sells the damage of each blow to keep Norton looking good. That
said, it’s probably for the best that this is kept short, as James hits a low
blow and another top rope splash to win.
No comments:
Post a Comment