November 12, 2020 – Newham, London
Primate & Wild Boar def. Kenny Williams & Amir Jordan
I like Williams & Jordan, but they clearly want to push the Hunt here. Williams & Jordan have more exciting offense, and they controlled a lot of the match. That was good for the quality of what we were watching, but the fact that the Hunt only won by the grace of Eddie Dennis distracting Jordan by slamming the mat is pretty lame. The Hunt hit a double diving headbutt on Jordan for the win at 9:27. **½
Rampage Brown def. Jack Starz
We probably needed a team of Starz types to feed the Hunt in the last match. Brown won in 2:21 with a Doctor Bomb. Starz got nothing. N/A
Ashton Smith & Oliver Carter ask Pretty Deadly about their relationship with Dennis. I’m glad they didn’t drop that bit of story, even though it was used here to roughly shoehorn an upcoming match between these two teams. Later, Sam Gradwell complains that he would have beaten Joe Coffey had it been one-on-one. I like the way he describes the match like it was a fight he got into in his neighborhood. Alexander Wolfe approaches him, angry at the whining, and calls Gradwell a disgrace.
Xia Brookside def. Nina Samuels
Ooof, four matches in an episode. No thanks. Also missing Brookside’s blue hair. Brookside has clearly been watching her CIMA matches, and she went for a Venus/Iconoclasm combo here. Samuels, who I feel offers very little to this brand, hurt her knee. Brookside capitalized on that and rolled Samuels up for the win at 5:50. There was very little to his, but I’m glad Brookside won. And then things get really dumb after the match, as Samuels reveals she was faking the injury and attacks Brookside. Why would you lose on purpose? **
Trent Seven def. Dave Mastiff {Heritage Cup Rules Semifinal Match}
Mastiff had a slight advantage in round one, though it ended with a crossbody collision. Seven caught Mastiff with la magistral cradle at 1:22 of the second round to get the first fall. Mastiff controlled the third round. He hit a massive elbow, but the referee taking the time to check if Seven had been knocked out (which would have given Mastiff an automatic win) drained the time in the round. Seven was not recovered going into the fourth round and Mastiff hit him with Into the Void to win his first fall in 42 seconds. The fifth fall (erroneously labeled the sixth on the screen) saw Seven avoid the cannonball and turn Mastiff’s attempt at a superplex into the Birminghammer to get the win at 1:30 of the fall. This worked better within the context of the tournament than it did on its own, as Seven proved to be more resilient that Joseph Conners, and his cunning gave him the victory. That’s not to say that it didn’t work on its own at all, but without the story it’s just not as compelling. ***
I imagine the finals will be in two weeks since we already have the big Women’s Championship match next week. I think they’ll do five minute rounds, which could mean that the match takes up the majority of the show. I have faith that Seven and A-Kid can do something really creative with the spot.