November 28, 2019 – Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire
Piper Niven def. Jinny
I expected this to be the main event of this episode, but they’re airing the eight-man tag a week earlier than anticipated. Jazzy Gabert tried to get involved a few minutes into the match and got ejected. From there Jinny actually got to shine, breaking out high kicks that I’ve never seen her hit before. That’s the kind of thing she needs to do to make her seem credible against the much larger women in the division. Niven hit the Michinoku Driver not long after that for the win at 7:28. Decent enough stuff here. Niven calls out Kay Lee Ray after the match. KLR comes out and smacks Niven, so Niven beats the crap out of her. Then Toni Storm returns and attacks KLR also. Though they have a common enemy, Storm and Niven are clearly not on the same page. **¾
Eddie Dennis def. Dreiss Gordon
Dennis, gone too long with an injury, gets no reaction from the crowd. The setback also brings him back to squashing folks status, which is decidedly the most boring version of Dennis. The commentators hammer home that Gordon was trained in part by Trent Seven, and Dennis hit the Seven Star Lariat here, so that’s where this is going. Dennis hit the Next Stop Driver for the win at 4:06. Total squash. N/A
Joseph Conners tells Radzi that he’s Takeover-worthy. He’s going to tell Johnny Saint that he wants a triple threat match against Travis Banks and Ligero to prove it. Banks lost on the single Takeover he appeared on, and Ligero has never been on a Takeover, so I’m not sure how that proves anything.
Noam Dar def. Ashton Smith
Nigel McGuinness geeking the fuck out because Dar used a rebound lariat is about the cutest thing ever. This was a solid midcard match, with Smith fighting harder than we’ve seen him fight in quite some time, but Dar showing he’s more skilled and frankly, higher on the pecking order. Dar got the win with the Nova Roller at 7:50. ***
Next week, Jordan Devlin will take on A-Kid, and the triple threat match Conners mentioned will happen as well.
Joe Coffey, Mark Coffey, Wolfgang & Ilja Dragunov dco. Alexander Wolfe, Fabian Aichner, Marcel Barthel & WALTER
I’m fairly certain that this is the first eight-man tag match in the history of this show. There were a lot of cool little stories in this match. There was the lingering issue between Dragunov and Wolfe. There was Joe getting aggressive any time he sniffed WALTER might do something. There was Imperium begging off when all out war was in the offering, ostensibly in the name of the sacred ring but more likely because they weren’t confident they’d win. I also think there’s a lot to mine from a young, plucky Dragunov vs. a big, dominant WALTER feud for the title. The second half of the match focused a lot on Aichner & Barthel fighting Mark & Wolfgang, which is great because there’s a title at stake. With the rest of the field down, WALTER and Joe finally got a chance to tee off on each other and build some excitement for the inevitable title match between them. Joe showed great energy here and sold like a madman for the champ. The fight went to the floor and eventually everyone got counted out at 15:21. That finish was a real stinker, and a missed opportunity to put Gallus over as a real threat. The rest of the match was a ton of fun, so it’s a shame. ***½