October 1, 2020 – Newham, London
Kenny Williams def. Amir Jordan and Ashton Smith {Triple Threat Match}
Winner faces Trent Seven in the opening round of the Heritage Cup tournament. This was sometimes cute, sometimes clunky, but almost all the time felt like it belonged on an indie show. I liked when Williams and Jordan would cooperate, which had the side effect of making Smith’s comebacks sort of interesting. Williams pinned Smith with a DDT at 9:25. Jordan celebrates with his buddy Williams after the match. **¾
A very nicely produced Eddie Dennis video reminds us that he’s bringing Pretty Deadly under his wing. I really liked that. Also, nobody has taken credit for the attack on Mark Andrews forever ago, but his friend Flash Morgan Webster is ready for the Heritage Cup tournament. K.
Jinny def. Xia Brookside
Jinny came into this with two singles wins and a tag win over Brookside. One of those singles matches was crazy bad, but the other was alright. I guess this was more like the latter, though it was plenty awkward at times. Jinny won in 6:32 with a weird chinlock. Jinny cuts a promo after the match that’s clearly leading to a title match for her, and I’m still not interested in it. Kay Lee Ray has a “State of the Union,” next week, so look for the title match to get booked there. **
A-Kid takes on Webster in the tournament next week. A-Kid is pretty dope, so I hope he gets beyond the first round. Then, they show a Hell in a Cell promo. I normally don’t comment on main roster stuff, but it looks like they’re sticking with the red cage and I just want to go on the record saying I hate it and I won’t be watching.
Noam Dar def. Alexander Wolfe {Quarterfinal Heritage Cup Rules Match}
Pete Dunne is the guest referee. The first round was all chain wrestling, done reasonably well. In the second round, Dar hit a few cheap shots and used British wrestling chicanery to get a roll up to win the first fall at 2:49 of the round. Wolfe was more aggressive in the third fall, but Dar made it through without losing a fall. Wolfe hit a cheap shot after the bell. The fourth round was fast and intense, and Wolfe got his first fall with a German suplex in 58 seconds. Dar spent the fifth fall trying to tap Wolfe out, but Wolfe responded in kind. Dunne catches Dar using the ropes to cheat (“Aw Pete, come on!”) and kicks his hand away, but Dar hits the Nova Roller anyway and gets the win at 2:57 of the round. Similar to Ring of Honor’s empty arena Pure Title tournament, this is a good example of making the most of a bad situation. The style of the match needs an audience less than a typical one, and the three-minute rounds means that nothing goes on for long enough for you to realize that guys are fighting for the entertainment of no one in the building. Also, Dar is just killing it on this taping cycle. I really want him to win the tournament. ***½
Wolfe blames Dunne for the loss and gets physical. Dunne kicks his ass. WALTER comes out to get his friend’s back, and the two of them beat up Dunne. Ilja Dragunov makes the save. I’m down for this tag match, and glad that we’ll be getting some Dunne matches.