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DarK_RaideR

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Everything posted by DarK_RaideR

  1. I was reading the show and thinking "Man, much as I love Tameka Sky, Yvonne got shafted again putting Sky over". I scrolled down to write about that booking compared to her earlier narrative, then you just had to hit me square in the feels with the new one.
  2. A very well written show with some very interesting storylines developing. Well done.
  3. Don't think you are, I started a new save after my WQ2020 one and had forgotten to set that promotion back to open at random. Since it was now already open at the start of the game, I kept a close eye to see who the AI would hire but indeed there were never any events held, must be due to what you mentioned.
  4. I thought the driving force behind such companies is something along the lines of "just throw more bodies into the meat grinder"
  5. Guessing you're referring to this one from the NeoTokyo Joshi diary. Not sure about the creator.
  6. <blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="Historian" data-cite="Historian" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="47530" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>IWe suffered the loss of Conner Threepwood -- which was hard to stomach, but it allowed Nate DeMarcus to rise up to the front of the pack as the lead babyface.</div></blockquote><p> Much like the passing of Jebediah allowed Riley McManus to take that spot in the Climb <img alt=":D" data-src="//content.invisioncic.com/g322608/emoticons/biggrin.png.929299b4c121f473b0026f3d6e74d189.png" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></p>
  7. <p>Good show and an interesting development with the appearance of Starfall. Also, I may be wrong but it seems some of the portraits in the opening post as well as the show do not match the people in the text below? Anyway, here are my predictions</p><p> </p><p> Majima-Gun (Majima, Takasu & Kawabata) vs <strong>StarFall (Jippensha, Hashimoto & Lotus)</strong></p><p> <em>Gotta establish the new group as credible</em></p><p> Heartbreakers (Mushashibo, Tsujimura & Kasahara) vs <strong>Kanto Cyber Elite (Takami, Onryo & Frost)</strong></p><p> <strong>The Next Big Things</strong> vs Petra Forsberg & Rei Chikanatsu</p><p> Himari Miwa vs <strong>Kana Kikkawa</strong></p><p> #Cute (Mizucore & Kiyoko Kikkawa) vs <strong>Majima-Gun (Mochizuki & Isako)</strong></p>
  8. <p><em>Sendai, February 2020</em></p><p><em> Disposable Queens</em></p><p><em> Attendance: 405 paying fans</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> A disappointing debut. Underwhelming. Not living up to the hype. Lacking major stars. Ranked “originally Small, but now Tiny at best” and “third -by a long shot- best wrestling show in Tohoku”. And yet, here we were, ready to hold our second show. Just 50 fans less, give or take. No backstage incidents. Just Mushashibo missing this show due to injury. This wasn’t that bad after all. This could work. I would make it work.</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><img alt="ZtrlLrb.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/ZtrlLrb.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> SUPREME Yoshida opened the show with her entrance, sequined robe and all. The name, the look, the swagger (especially for someone with just a full year in the business), it was all out of an ‘80s SWF tape. So of course our fans hated her and they weren’t shy to make their opinion heard, but I’m unshakable in my decision to push her as a face, initially at least, if only to get even more under those fans’ collective skin. Gotta go with the reverse psychology on these counter culture people. Plus, girl’s a moving merch stand with all that ring gear and they’ll buy it all while hating her intensely.</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><img alt="D0Ovhnb.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/D0Ovhnb.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> After that start, Kaori Mochizuki was greeted with cheers as the hero who’d rescue the audience from Yoshida. It is a messed up place if fans are cheering their hearts out for the biggest, baddest monster heel, I’m telling you. Mochizuki is the largest woman in WQ2020 and that’s an achievement on its own in a roster that includes Monster Ishimura and Unstoppable Tai. Yeah, she’s got the charisma to be more than a hulking brute, but until she polishes her skills or is able to cut a half decent promo, it’s big bad brute for her right now.</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><img alt="ZtrlLrb.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/ZtrlLrb.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="yuig55e.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/yuig55e.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="D0Ovhnb.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/D0Ovhnb.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> Yoshida did the smart thing and dodged her opponent as much as she could, drawing even more heat out of the crowd, before she was cornered. Again, she outsmarted her opponent with her antics to escape. This was brilliant. She was depriving them of a proper match, then going right into sports entertainment territory. Then, to make matters worse, she attempted to retaliate using weapons. Yup, SUPREME Yoshida was finally getting into deathmatch wrestling and it was surreal, almost comical, to see such a character be so out of their element. Once contact was made though, Mochizuki no-sold the weapon shots and promptly proceeded to demolish her opponent, with Yoshida selling her butt off to make her opponent look devastating. Might have been a tad too late to try and garner sympathy, but at least the chaos helped hide the rookie’s flaws, as did being on the receiving end of most moves for the rest of the match, leading to a scary Jack-Knife Powerbomb for the finish.</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> In a bout that had a decent reaction from the crowd but terrible wrestling, Kaori Mochizuki defeated SUPREME Yoshida in a Deathmatch match in 10:29 by pinfall with a Jack-Knife Powerbomb.</em></p><p><em> Rating: 24</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><img alt="K1dVjTx.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/K1dVjTx.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="qgwA8Lx.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/qgwA8Lx.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="yuig55e.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/yuig55e.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="CpQSLiz.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/CpQSLiz.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="vXdS1jd.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/vXdS1jd.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> Time for some proper deathmatch action and seriously, how did I not think of pairing Etelka and Manhunter right from our first show? I mean, just look at them next to each other! Probably keep looking at that instead of the match too, because matching styles were the only thing these teams had going on for them. In a perfect world, this would have been the savage team versus the street hooligan team, but this world is far from perfect and all these four did was bash each other with whatever they could get their hands on. Hannah even landed awkwardly during one of the final spots and shattered her ankle. I mean, should have seen it coming because her head was someplace else since the opening bell, but she had to tone it down and let Helena take the pin instead. Easily the worst match of the night.</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> In a terrible match, Etelka The Hun and Maneater defeated The Hooligan Sisters in a Deathmatch match in 10:28 when Etelka The Hun pinned Helena Hooligan.</em></p><p><em> Rating: 17</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><img alt="FgX4pZ4.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/FgX4pZ4.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="yuig55e.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/yuig55e.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="FwvLP0N.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/FwvLP0N.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> Remember last time when I mentioned how Piper Hale was a U.S. Marine? Never got around to why she no longer is. Piper got medically discharged due to a bad knee and that’s why she wears a brace when wrestling. Which, of course, makes it a prime target for opponents and a pain in the ass when something happens to it. And happen it did, somehow due to Piper’s fault and not her opponent’s, who was sloppy as hell. The spectre of vengeance was gunning to regain some momentum after failing to capture the Queen of the Deathmatch title but clearly something was ringing in her head still from that match. This meant that rookie Hale got most of the offense in while her opponent no-sold it, until the injury happened and Onryo had to wrap it up with a hasty submission. What the hell.</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> In a bout that had a decent reaction from the crowd but sub-par wrestling, Onryo defeated Piper Hale in a Deathmatch match in 9:46 by submission.</em></p><p><em> Rating: 20</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><img alt="z5NMYsM.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/z5NMYsM.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> Once again, Hiroko Iha came out to show off her cosplay skills and perform another pop song. What seems to be turning into a habit for our shows was interrupted by the riffing of an electric guitar and the appearance of none other than...</em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><p><em><iframe width="560" height="315" src="</em></p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/embed/9YrWsmlJSiw" rel="external nofollow"><em>https://www.youtube.com/embed/9YrWsmlJSiw"</em></a><em> frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe></em><p><em> </em><img alt="JU3DT4p.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/JU3DT4p.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></p></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> Brianna F’N Riott! The ultimate “attention prostitute” and even that attention part is optional, given her track record, so is it really any surprise she got into wrestling? Anyway, this whole segment was better in my mind than the catfight that ensued. Fans barely know of Brianna and did not appreciate the interruption, but that was about it. They didn’t care about the catfight that ensued either, especially since it didn’t involve any barb wire or broken tables. Seriously, Iha’s torn outfit probably got more sympathy than her bloodied, clawed-out pretty face did. People are weird.</em></p><p><em> Rating: 11</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><img alt="lQ1IXVB.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/lQ1IXVB.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="R5hc6Zf.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/R5hc6Zf.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="yuig55e.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/yuig55e.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="yEdv8H0.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/yEdv8H0.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="wZuYKBR.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/wZuYKBR.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> Personal favorite right here, probably my personal match of the night. Takudome and Tsujimura built up some steam in light of their upcoming title match by defeating Unkillable and my booking genius shone once again, because both these teams seem to naturally gel together as units. Unkillable merch disappeared after this debut match of theirs, with Mad Millie Morgan taking her usual tough British punk character to dark, bloodthirsty places in order to fit in with this company and her suicidal teammate. I could tell she was out of her comfort zone, because she took a nasty bump that caused her to shatter her collar bone. Actually, the entire match was a raging dumpster fire of a spotfest and the winners weren’t spared either, since Angel faceplanted herself on the turnbuckle and somehow managed to bruise her eye socket. Speaking of her, fans nearly booed her out of the building, which makes sense because she’s made her name in clean-cut joshi matches for years. That’s part of why the match was booked to be a chaotic, fast paced mess, in-and-out before they notice the bad parts, but Rika apparently took the fans’ reaction to heart and decided to improvise, using the ropes for some extra leverage on her pin. Might be overdoing the reverse psychology thing with having our top babyface team be hypocrites, but then again, who needs absolutes in wrestling morality?</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> In a bout that didn't have much heat and terrible wrestling, Angel Takudome and Rika Tsujimura defeated Unkillable in a Deathmatch match in 10:12 when Rika Tsujimura pinned Mad Millie Morgan while using the ropes for leverage.</em></p><p><em> Rating: 21</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><img alt="EhdbhBQ.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/EhdbhBQ.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="Fsn9AI7.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/Fsn9AI7.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> Next out was Tereza Smirnov, who cut a promo in Russian -again- while her tracksuited bodyguards had surrounded the ring. She was interrupted (can see a pattern developing here) by Australia’s prime white trash character, Bonnie Bogan, who apparently had enough of her yapping and decided to shut her up. That meant she had to fight past the bodyguards of course, but Bonnie was all too happy to throw hands with them. Tereza used the distraction to escape, Bonnie beat up a bunch of dudes to look awesome and the segment tanked significantly less than the Iha-Riott variant earlier.</em></p><p><em> Rating: 26</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><img alt="SFs78pU.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/SFs78pU.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="SPpAnlw.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/SPpAnlw.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="yuig55e.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/yuig55e.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="Rk9NaUI.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/Rk9NaUI.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="M7c6AIc.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/M7c6AIc.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> Now the funny part is, Smirnov’s bodyguards were actually our ringside crew in tracksuits and this next match started before they could reset the ring, mainly before they could spread out the deathmatch toys. As a result, you had two teams of maniacs with nothing around to utilize, which of course took away some of the excitement. Not just that, it made a fair fight pretty hard to sell, since Majima and Dr. Yumaniac had little to use in order to avoid getting squashed, but somehow they pulled it off using -gasp- wrestling moves! Mostly on Tai who can sell and has a modicum of agility in her movement, but I digress. Ten minutes never felt longer, but they salvaged what they could before Mizucore’s music started playing out of the blue, distracting Dr. Yumaniac who got hit by Ishimura for the finish.</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> In a decent match, Unstoppable Monsters defeated Dr. Yumaniac and Naoko Majima in 10:01 when Monster Ishimura pinned Dr. Yumaniac with a Running Butt Avalanche after a distraction from Mizucore.</em></p><p><em> Rating: 26</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><p><em><iframe width="560" height="315" src="</em></p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/embed/GvD3CHA48pA" rel="external nofollow"><em>https://www.youtube.com/embed/GvD3CHA48pA"</em></a><em> frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe></em><p><em> </em><img alt="FGkIMO3.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/FGkIMO3.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></p></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> Once the ring was cleared again, Mizucore made her proper entrance and performed one of her bands songs. Obviously on playback, because we couldn’t afford to have her band play live. Not that fans minded much. Myself, I loved the part right before the song, where she apologized for whoever on sound control made a mistake and blasted her song earlier than scheduled. She nailed that pokerface, to the point where I couldn’t tell whether she was being ironic or if the sound guy actually had her song set on a timer and the match went on for a little longer than expected.</em></p><p><em> Rating: 49</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> </em></p><div style="text-align:center;"><img alt="kRE1tJG.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/kRE1tJG.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="yuig55e.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/yuig55e.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="o275zeZ.jpg" data-src="https://i.imgur.com/o275zeZ.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></div><p></p><p></p><p><em> And finally, our big main event, picking up from where our debut show left off. Title wasn’t on the line, as the story goes that Takami cared more about giving me a taste of “proper wrestling” than winning my title. Which kinda sounds degrading of the title, but it also makes her claim all the more serious if she’s willing to forgo a title shot in order to prove a point. Anyway, we took this to the limit and mostly out of the ring, brawling wildly in the stands between the fans. It was nice because I took her out of the ring where I’m most comfortable, but we still got to do hardcore spots without giving up on showcasing her wrestling skills. Think my best spot was when we were all the way to the back rows and she hit me with a Death Valley Driver on the stairs, which I proceeded to roll down all the way to the ring. That was also the cue to bring the match back to the ring for the finish and following the ladder spot, she gave me a roundhouse to the back of the head that felt like she was trying to kick my head off my shoulders and put me in a neck wrench. I tapped, proving I’m not invincible, she made her point, thing is, will she also stake a claim at my gold after this victory? Ah, come back again next month to find out!</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> In a decent match, Ai Takami defeated Mirai Kajahara in a Deathmatch match in 11:08 by submission.</em></p><p><em> Rating: 29</em></p><p><em> </em></p><p><em> That show would end up getting an even worse rating than the first one and probably lost us some more fans, but I was fine with it. If I had to break this place down to build it back up, I would do so. Meanwhile, I had more pressing matters to attend to, like encouraging Angel Takudome. Poor girl was brought in to be the veteran presence, instead she got booed and injured, so I figured she could use the pick-me-up. She’s probably been through worse in her long career, but it wouldn’t hurt to cheer her up a bit either. Speaking of injuries, I gave the softest of hugs to Mad Millie Morgan for her efforts that night, trying really hard to not further aggravate her damaged collar bone. Hannah Hooligan was limping her way out of the locker room too and I gave her a shout out for being awesome enough to continue wrestling past her injury, but I doubt she cared much, assuming she heard me in the first place. Painkillers man, they make you numb.</em></p>
  9. <div style="text-align:center;"><img alt="200.gif" data-src="https://media4.giphy.com/media/ncU3bkZ5ghDlS/200.gif" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></div><p></p><p></p>
  10. Great concept, great portraits and stable logos and the usual quality writing. Following along, of course.
  11. That sounds like a diary I would very much enjoy following.
  12. <p></p><div style="text-align:center;"><p><strong><span style="font-size:14px;">Gothenburg Submission Fighting recruit Mugur Boc</span></strong></p></div><p></p><p></p><p> SIGMA and RSC veteran Heavyweight "The Crusher" Mugur Boc announced he has been accepted as a member of Gothenburg Submission Fighting. Already a world class fighter and skilled grappler at 35 years of age, Boc is expected to keep his grappling skills in top form while also using his experience to help train the next generation of MMA fighters.</p><p> </p><p> </p><div style="text-align:center;"><p><strong><span style="font-size:14px;">Snettisham moving to Heavyweight</span></strong></p></div><p></p><p></p><p> "Jersey" Joe Snettisham saw the writing on the wall with the announcement of the lighter weight divisions as well as his own losing streak and decided to move from Super Heavyweight to being a Heavyweight. Whether he can make weight and perform better in this new division remains to be seen.</p><p> </p><p> </p><div style="text-align:center;"><p><strong><span style="font-size:14px;">Aljur Paras visiting Tai Sheng Men Society</span></strong></p></div><p></p><p>Tai Sheng Men Society may have lost Pai Cheng but they soon gained another RSC member in Aljur Paras. The Filippino Heavyweight fighter is understood to be on a short term visit to the training camp and their focus on submission wrestling might just prove to be a killer addition to his standing striking power.</p>
  13. Red Star Combat Top 10 Rankings as of April 1st, 2004 Super Heavyweight #1 Hector Jimenez (6-0, 3-0 RSC) ⬆️ #2 Colin J L Capes (8-1, 3-1 RSC) ⬇️ #3 Dwight Witherspoon (9-1, 3-1 RSC) ⬇️ #4 Zsolt Hargitay (11-4, 3-1 RSC) #5 Zydrunas Sigauskas (5-1, 3-1 RSC) #6 Melvin Yeo (6-1, 4-1 RSC) ⬆️ #7 Joe Snettisham (9-6, 0-3 RSC) ⬇️ #8 Vasily Klyushev (5-3, 3-3 RSC) #9 Daugvinas Blekaitis (5-3, 3-3 RSC) #10 Fred Goggins (6-2, 1-2 RSC) Heavyweight #1 Pai Cheng (14-0, 5-0 RSC) #2 Mugur Boc (13-3, 1-1 RSC) #3 Khru Duangjan (20-5, 0-0 RSC) #4 Percy Catcher (14-7, 2-1 RSC) #5 Josef Jankowski (10-1, 1-0 RSC) #6 Roope Kuqi (10-1, 1-1 RSC) ⬆️ #7 Dave Lennon (21-9, 2-1 RSC) ⬇️ #8 Vittorio Pescatelli (8-3, 2-3 RSC) #9 Hanif Hussain (9-3, 3-0 RSC) ⬆️ #10 Glen McBeam (7-0, 0-0 RSC) ⬆️ Light Heavyweight #1 Hyun-Shik Lim (18-3, 2-0 RSC) #2 Carlos dos Santos (18-7, 3-1 RSC) #3 Michael Dali (8-0, 4-0 RSC) #4 Emil Karlsson (9-0, 1-0 RSC) ⬆️ #5 Leandro Piquet (23-12, 2-1 RSC) ⬇️ #6 Allen LeFleur (13-1, 2-1 RSC) #7 Mahak Kirakosyan (10-3, 3-3 RSC) #8 Tomasz Petrov (4-1, 4-1 RSC) #9 Shane Gilchrist (17-10, 0-2 RSC) ⬆️ #10 Frankie Burgess (8-4, 3-3 RSC) ⬇️ Middleweight #1 Petey Mack (14-6, 0-0 RSC) #2 Bambang Sriyanto (27-11-2, 1-1 RSC) #3 Kojuro Kudo (16-5-1, 0-0 RSC) #4 Carl Ratcliffe (24-8, 1-1 RSC) #5 Esteban Vega (11-1, 1-1 RSC) #6 Emile Rachal (8-0, 1-0 RSC) #7 Drazen Gabelich (12-7, 1-1 RSC) ⬆️ #8 Ramin Rostami (8-0, 4-0 RSC) ⬇️ #9 Osvald Kikkas (11-3, 4-1 RSC) ⬇️ #10 Tomasz Mlakar (5-0, 2-0 RSC) ⬆️ Welterweight #1 Simon Vine (27-11, 1-0 RSC) #2 Dominykas Jankovic (16-7, 3-2 RSC) ⬆️ #3 Hamilton Fonseca Jr (12-3, 3-0 RSC) #4 Kafu Bunya (15-5, 0-1 RSC) ⬇️ #5 Syed Tan (19-7-1, 0-1 RSC) #6 Piotr Dabrowski (22-10, 3-2 RSC) #7 Mauricio de Terreros (11-1, 2-1 RSC) #8 Carmelo Rossi (15-7, 2-01 RSC) #9 Pavel Radulov (9-3, 1-0 RSC) #10 Sebastian Fernandez (11-4, 2-2 RSC) Lightweight #1 Motoki Hojo (23-8, 1-0 RSC) #2 Georges Nouri (18-4, 3-1 RSC) #3 Folke Dalen (11-1, 4-1 RSC) #4 Min-Soo Sik (11-2, 0-1 RSC) #5 Goncalves Cassaro (7-1, 0-0 RSC) ⬆️ #6 Harald Hubner (10-6, 1-1 RSC) ⬆️ #7 Chakrit Mamanee (5-1, 4-1 RSC) ⬆️ #8 Johan Kavli (7-1, 0-1 RSC) ⬇️ #9 Jonas Jankowski (4-0, 2-0 RSC) #10 Dominykas Wojcik (4-0, 2-0) Featherweight #1 Foggy Lee (16-3, 4-0 RSC) ⬆️ #2 Rafael Tavares (19-6, 3-1 RSC) #3 Colm Dee (16-7, 1-0 RSC) ⬆️ #4 Marco Bernacci (11-3, 0-0 RSC) #5 Jay Dorridge (12-4, 1-1 RSC) ⬆️ #6 Ronaldo Freitas (10-1, 3-1 RSC) ⬆️ #7 Louie Sullivan (10-1, 0-0 RSC) ⬆️ #8 Ryan Fenniman (11-3, 0-1 RSC) ⬇️ #9 Milovan Ajetovic (9-7, 0-0 RSC) ⬆️ #10 Saul Cervantes (6-1, 3-1 RSC) ⬆️ Bantamweight #1 Nadir Mendes Ferreira (10-1, 0-0 RSC) #2 Pipob Jakkuprasat (14-4, 0-0 RSC) #3 Tossapol Puangchan (6-2, 0-0 RSC) #4 Supachai Thamsatchanan (7-2, 0-0 RSC) #5 Ye Ting (6-1, 0-0 RSC) #6 Li Kung (4-0, 0-0 RSC) #7 Sying Tan (3-1, 0-0 RSC) #8 Liang Tsao (4-1, 0-0 RSC) #9 Shing Jen (4-0, 0-0 RSC) #10 Long Kung (3-0, 0-0 RSC) Women’s Featherweight #1 Rachel McGuiness (12-4, 3-0 RSC) #2 Nora Bethlen (7-0, 3-0 RSC) #3 Annika Sjolin (7-1, 5-1 RSC) #4 Regina de Avila (6-2, 4-2 RSC) #5 Rosamaria Correa (9-2, 3-2 RSC) #6 Maja Krawczyk (4-1, 4-1 RSC) ⬆️ #7 Vasya Kaczmarek (9-3, 3-3 RSC) ⬆️ #8 Rugile Wisniewska (4-0, 1-0 RSC) ⬆️ #9 Diana Wozniak (4-0, 1-0 RSC) ⬆️ #10 Zofia Ivanov (4-2, 4-2 RSC) ⬇️ Women’s Bantamweight #1 Maya Komagata (12-0, 3-0 RSC) #2 Katie-Jayne Paulson (11-1, 3-0 RSC) #3 Rain Richards (17-1, 1-0 RSC) #4 Katarzyna Wojchiechowska (10-2, 3-1 RSC) #5 Thea Higgins (10-3, 2-0 RSC) #6 Tiiu Kass (12-2, 2-2 RSC) #7 Dorothy Gayle (8-3, 2-1 RSC) #8 Vicki Summers (10-6, 1-2 RSC) #9 Carmen Routhwaite (9-3, 2-3 RSC) #10 Agnieszka Hajek (4-2, 4-2 RC) Women’s Flyweight #1 Daljit Samir (14-2, 4-2 RSC) #2 Rennaya Rives (14-1, 4-1 RSC) #3 Manami Ken (12-2, 2-0 RSC) #4 Trish Biel (11-1, 3-1 RSC) ⬆️ #5 Shannon Palmer (12-3, 3-1 RSC) ⬆️ #6 Helena Broderick (10-2, 3-1 RSC) ⬇️ #7 Chisaki Gojo (10-3, 2-1) #8 Kimie Igarashi (9-3-1, 0-1-1 RSC) #9 Natasha Mellow (10-3, 2-2 RSC) #10 Maria Ferraz (9-4, 1-3 RSC)
  14. RSC 41: Capes vs Jimenez Monday, Week 4, March 2004 – St. Petersburg,Russia Attendance: 459 Preliminary Card <table border="0" bgcolor=#DCDCDC><tr><td align="left" width = "780"> <details><summary></summary>Light Heavyweight: Gavriil Sviridov (CR#16, 9-7, 1-2 RSC) def. Vojtech Prochazka (CR#17, 3-0, 1-0 RSC) via KO (Kick) – Round 1 (1:33) [Good] Middleweight: Dovydas Avetisyan (CR#25, 2-1, 0-1 RSC) def. Sander Pospisil (CR#24, 3-2, 0-2 RSC) via Submission (RNC) – Round 1 (1:00) [Good] Women’s Flyweight: Lora Hayes (CR#15, 9-5, 2-3 RSC) def. Joan Whitehouse (CR#16, 7-3, 0-2 RSC) via Unanimous Decision [Good] Women’s Featherweight: Johanna Lagerholm (CR#17, 4-2, 3-2 RSC) def. Aldona Dvorak (CR#11, 3-3, 3-3 RSC) via Unanimous Decision [Decent] Welterweight: [/b] Rokas Grabowski (CR#20, 3-1, 0-1 RSC) def. [/b] Nojus Fiala (CR#25, 2-1, 0-1 RSC) via TKO (Strikes) – Round 1 (4:18) [Good]</summary></details></details></td></tr></table></details> Main Card Heavyweight: Roope Kuqi (CR#7, 9-1, 0-1 RSC) def. Wally da Cunha (CR#9, 18-11, 1-1 RSC) via Submission (RNC) – Round 1 (2:14) [Great] Welterweight: Dominykas Jankovic (CR#4, 15-7, 2-2 RSC) def. Kafu Bunya (CR#2, 15-4, 0-0 RSC) via Unanimous Decision [Good] Featherweight: Colm Dee (CR#4, 15-7, 0-0 RSC) def. Ryan Fenniman (CR#6, 11-2, 0-0 RSC) via KO (Punch) – Round 1 (1:39) [Good] Women’s Featherweight: Rosamaria Correa (CR#5, 8-2, 2-2 RSC) def. Zofia Ivanov (CR#6, 4-1, 4-1 RSC) via TKO (Strikes) – Round 1 (0:37) [Good] RSC Super Heavyweight Championship: Hector Jimenez (CR#3, 5-0, 2-0 RSC) def. Colin J. L. Capes (WR#10, CR#1, 8-0, 3-0 RSC) via Unanimous Decision [Average] [Capes broke his nose during the fight] - Having finished all 5 of his last opponents, Colin J. L. Capes walked confidently into his first title defense, but Hector Jimenez had done his homework and dodged all three attempts the champion made for a big head kick in the opening round. That was the most exciting part of the fight, to be honest, since both big men aren’t exactly renowned for their stamina. Capes attempted to score points by muscling his challenger against the cage, but the longer fight brought out some surprising takedown skills on Jimenez, who used them for previous ground and pound points. Capes, sporting a broken nose, made one last desperate attempt at a head kick in the final round catching nothing but air and with the match taken to the judges, Jimenez was unanimously declared the winner and new RSC Super Heavyweight champion! - Shocking co-main event, with Brazil’s Rosamaria Correa wrapping it up as soon as it started with a single uppercut! The muay thai fighter caught Ivanov square in the jaw and knocked her flat out, ending the match by pouncing on top to finish her off with more strikes. - A tale of two opposites in the Featherweight division’s double RSC debut: Birmingham’s Ryan Fenniman stepped into the cage having finished 4 of his 5 last opponents, whereas Ireland’s Colm Dee hasn’t won a fight for two and a half years, since September 2001. Odds seem to be on the British youngster’s side, but Dee had something to prove and apparently that drove him to deliver a killer punch just a minute and a half into the match, shutting out the lights for his opponents in a single blow that sent the fans into a frenzy. - Kafu Bunya made his RSC debut, the former ALPHA-1 Welterweight champion going toe to toe with RSC’s former Welterweight champion, Dominykas Jankovic in a fight that was as even as it could get. Bunya dominated round one and the first half of round two with quick strikes, while Jankovic controlled the second half with a total of three takedowns and a 100% takedown success rate. This was where Bunya’s strong point shone, his great defensive skills allowing him to survive on the ground and often escape with some great sprawling. The score of 29-28 reflects how the fight played out, with Jankovic barely edging a win thanks to his ground control game and now perhaps dreaming of another shot at gold. - Great night for Roope Kuqi in the opener as the “Second Generation Star” eliminated Wally da Cunha’s muay thai striking but getting in up close and pressuring him in the grapple, until he was able to take him down and apply the RNC. Kuqi is now back to his winning ways, following his first and only career loss so far to Mugur Boc back in November. Bonus Fight of the Night: Kuqi vs da Cunha KO of the Night: Dee vs Fenniman Submission of the Night: Kuqi vs da Cunha Post-Fight Hector Jimenez: "I think the obvious first challenger would be Dwight Witherspoon. He’s the former champion and a great fighter, I have a lot of respect for him and I think we could put on a great fight for the fans." Rosamaria Correa: ”Big thanks to my fans and sponsors for supporting me. Next fight? I’d love to kick Nora Bethlen’s ass.” Colm Dee: ”Screw this Ireland-UK thing, I got nothing against this kid. My previous fight was in SIGMA against Marco Bernacci. I know he’s on this roster too and I want a chance to reclaim my pride by defeating him next time I enter this cage.” Dominykas Jankovic: ”Thanks to the Mantas Andreyev Fighting team for helping me prepare and to my sponsors for supporting me financially so I could fight tonight. Kafu Bunya has been in the global top 10 and that was not by accident, he has my respect for what I saw tonight.”
  15. RSC 40 Marazzina vs Lee Sunday, Week 2, March 2004 – Germany Attendance: 491 Preliminary Card <table border="0" bgcolor=#DCDCDC><tr><td align="left" width = "780"> <details><summary></summary>Welterweight: Dominykas Ivanov (CR#16, 4-0, 1-0 RSC) def. Petrov Dordevic (CR#23, 2-2, 0-2 RSC) via Submission (Armbar) – Round 1 (4:57) [Great] Light Heavyweight: Emil Karlsson (CR#5, 8-0, 0-0 RSC) def. Markus Jankovic (CR#18, 3-0, 1-0 RSC) via TKO (Strikes) – Round 1 (1:58) [Good] Lightweight: Ondrej Nikolic (CR#15, 3-1, 0-1 RSC) def. Johan Kavli (CR#5, 7-0, 0-0 RSC) via Submission (RNC) – Round 1 (1:06) [Good] Super Heavyweight: Melvin Yeo (CR#7, 5-1, 3-1 RSC) def. Joe Snettisham (CR#6, 9-5, 0-2 RSC) via Unanimous Decision [Good] Heavyweight: Gennady Lopatin (CR#20, 4-1, 1-1 RSC) def. Jakub Vasilyev (CR#18, 3-1, 0-1 RSC) via Submission (Kimura) – Round 1 (1:08) [Good]</summary></details></details></td></tr></table></details> Main Card Heavyweight: Bast Moulke (CR#16, 6-3, 3-3 RSC) def. Dmitry Gomolov (CR#19, 4-1, 1-1 RSC) via Unanimous Decision [Poor] Middleweight: Drazen Gabelich (CR#9, 11-7, 0-1 RSC) def. Leandro Bastos (CR#10, 9-3, 0-1 RSC) via Submission (Armbar) – Round 2 (4:21) [Good] Women’s Flyweight: Rennaya Rives (P4P#11, WR#4, CR#2, 13-1, 3-1 RSC) def. Helena Broderick (P4P#17,WR#8, CR#4, 10-2, 3-1 RSC) via TKO (Strikes) – Round 2 (1:23) [Decent] Light Heavyweight: Michael Dali (CR#3, 7-0, 3-0 RSC) def. Frankie Burgess (CR#9, 8-3, 3-2 RSC) via Split Decision – 28:29, 30:27, 30:27 [Good] RSC Featherweight Championship: Foggy Lee (CR#3, 15-3, 3-0 RSC) def. Francesco Marazzina (WR#20, CR#1, 24-10, 1-0 RSC) via Unanimous Decision [Good] [Marazzina broke his nose during the fight and announced his retirement afterwards] - An intense and emotional main event, a passing of the torch and changing of the guard as Foggy Lee defeated Francesco Marazzina for the title. Lee came hot out of the gates with long combos that pressured the defending champion but also wore out his stamina, allowing Marazzina to hip toss him, though he ran out of time before he could attempt a submission. Round two was the turning point, with Lee having gotten some much needed rest during the break and a lucky blow that shattered Marazzina’s nose. From that point on, Lee changed his approach to deliver fewer but stronger and more calculated blows while keeping his gas tank in check. Marazzina could only try and survive until the end, his only highlight being another takedown with less than a minute before the finish, mainly thanks to his opponent’s exhaustion but yet again, he could not get him to tap in time. Lee won by unanimous decision and Marazzina, still bleeding, made an emotional speech to announce his retirement from the sport of mixed martial arts. - Fan favorite Michael Dali made his RSC return after a leave of absence to fight for SIGMA. Frankie Burgess was his opponent, who Dali publicly denounced as a worthy former RSC Light Heavyweight champion leading up to this match. The hatred between the two was evident in their blows but neither man seemed to gain a decisive advantage and Dali’s inexperience showed in the fact that while he was able to land some decisive blows, instead of focusing on those he would instead throw himself into wild combinations of blows that Burgess would easily block. That said, the match went the full three rounds and ended up in a contested split decision, with Dali openly expressing his contempt for it during his post fight interview. - Rennaya Rives and Helena Broderick clashed in the Women’s Flyweight division, a fight with implications of a future title shot. Broderick got badly outstruck in the opening round, much to the dismay of her home crowd who was hoping for one of her powerful big right hands to turn the tables in her favor. Rives made good use of her feet for some head kicks during round one and it paid off as the damage piled on and one of these kicks in round two floored Broderick so she could finish her off and get the TKO victory. - Drazen Gabelich made his return after injuring his collar bone during training. The Croatian went into this fight with a patient, defensive strategy, trying to lure his opponent into big swings and a mistake that would allow him to shoot. While that made for a snoozer of an opening round, Bastos finally made the mistake and Gabelich managed to take him down for the armbar and submission, proving his game plan right all along. - Hot start to the show with hometown hero Bast Moulke getting a loud welcome as well as an audible reaction when neither he, nor Dmitry Gomolov touched gloves before the start of the fight. Despite all the trash talk back and forth leading to this fight, the actual outcome was unexciting to say the least, with Moulke mostly being the aggressor. All three rounds were more or less spent in a standing clinch, pushing each other to the cage for some dirty boxing, nothing to set the world ablaze but a clear win on the judges cards, 30-27 for Moulke who was in complete control from start to finish. Bonus Fight of the Night: Lee vs Marazzina KO of the Night: Rives vs Broderick Submission of the Night: Gabelich vs Bastos Post-Fight Foggy Lee: "Thanks to all my fans, sponsors and family at Montreal Fight Sciences. This was a tough fight and I’m excited to be the champion. If I had to pick someone to defend it against, that would be Rafael Tavares, I have huge respect for him and liked what I saw in his fight two weeks ago." Michael Dali: ”Quintrell Dubois, you biased French wanker, I got a 30-27, clean sweep on the other judges’ cards, what the hell is this score? This should have been a unanimous decision, there is no question I kicked this guy’s ass! Next up for an ass kicking is Lim and he better prepare, because I’m coming for him and his title!” Rennaya Rives: ”Yeah, I suffered my first and only loss to Trish Biel in that title match, but I’m making my way back to another shot. Now that Samir holds the gold, I’ll be watching her closely and hoping we meet in the cage soon.” Bast Moulke: ”I hope a fight can be arranged between me and Aljur Paras, I still want to face him inside the cage.”
  16. Red Star Combat Top 10 Rankings as of March 1st, 2004 Super Heavyweight #1 Colin J L Capes (8-0, 3-0 RSC) #2 Dwight Witherspoon (9-1, 3-1 RSC) #3 Hector Jimenez (5-0, 2-0 RSC) #4 Zsolt Hargitay (11-4, 3-1 RSC) #5 Zydrunas Sigauskas (4-1, 2-1 RSC) ⬆️ #6 Joe Snettisham (9-5, 0-2 RSC) ⬇️ #7 Melvin Yeo (5-1, 3-1 RSC) #8 Vasily Klyushev (5-3, 3-3 RSC) ⬆️ #9 Daugvinas Blekaitis (5-3, 3-3 RSC) ⬇️ #10 Fred Goggins (6-2, 1-2 RSC) Heavyweight #1 Pai Cheng (14-0, 5-0 RSC) #2 Mugur Boc (13-3, 1-1 RSC) #3 Khru Duangjan (20-5, 0-0 RSC) #4 Percy Catcher (14-7, 2-1 RSC) #5 Josef Jankowski (10-1, 1-0 RSC) #6 Dave Lennon (21-9, 2-1 RSC) #7 Roope Kuqi (9-1, 0-1 RSC) #8 Vittorio Pescatelli (8-3, 2-3 RSC) #9 Wally da Cunha (18-11, 1-1 RSC) #10 Hanif Hussain (9-3, 3-0 RSC) Light Heavyweight #1 Hyun-Shik Lim (18-3, 2-0 RSC) #2 Carlos dos Santos (18-7, 3-1 RSC) #3 Michael Dali (7-0, 3-0 RSC) #4 Leandro Piquet (23-12, 2-1 RSC) #5 Emil Karlsson (8-0, 0-0 RSC) #6 Allen LeFleur (13-1, 2-1 RSC) #7 Mahak Kirakosyan (10-3, 3-3 RSC) #8 Tomasz Petrov (4-1, 4-1 RSC) #9 Frankie Burgess (8-3, 3-2 RSC) ⬆️ #10 Shane Gilchrist (17-10, 0-2 RSC) ⬆️ Middleweight #1 Petey Mack (14-6, 0-0 RSC) #2 Bambang Sriyanto (27-11-2, 1-1 RSC) #3 Kojuro Kudo (16-5-1, 0-0 RSC) #4 Carl Ratcliffe (24-8, 1-1 RSC) #5 Esteban Vega (11-1, 1-1 RSC) #6 Emile Rachal (8-0, 1-0 RSC) ⬆️ #7 Ramin Rostami (8-0, 4-0 RSC) ⬇️ #8 Osvald Kikkas (11-3, 4-1 RSC) #9 Drazen Gabelich (11-7, 0-1 RSC) #10 Leandro Bastos (9-3, 0-1 RSC) Welterweight #1 Simon Vine (27-11, 1-0 RSC) #2 Kafu Bunya (15-4, 0-0 RSC) #3 Hamilton Fonseca Jr (12-3, 3-0 RSC) #4 Dominykas Jankovic (15-7, 2-2 RSC) #5 Syed Tan (19-7-1, 0-1 RSC) ⬆️ #6 Piotr Dabrowski (22-10, 3-2 RSC) ⬆️ #7 Mauricio de Terreros (11-1, 2-1 RSC) #8 Carmelo Rossi (15-7, 2-01 RSC) ⬇️ #9 Pavel Radulov (9-3, 1-0 RSC) ⬆️ #10 Sebastian Fernandez (11-4, 2-2 RSC) ⬆️ Lightweight #1 Motoki Hojo (23-8, 1-0 RSC) ⬆️ #2 Georges Nouri (18-4, 3-1 RSC) ⬇️ #3 Folke Dalen (11-1, 4-1 RSC) #4 Min-Soo Sik (11-2, 0-1 RSC) #5 Johan Kavli (7-0, 0-0 RSC) #6 Goncalves Cassaro (7-1, 0-0 RSC) #7 Harald Hubner (10-6, 1-1 RSC) #8 Chakrit Mamanee (5-1, 4-1 RSC) #9 Jonas Jankowski (4-0, 2-0 RSC) #10 Dominykas Wojcik (4-0, 2-0) Featherweight #1 Francesco Marazzina (24-10, 1-0 RSC) #2 Rafael Tavares (19-6, 3-1 RSC) ⬆️ #3 Foggy Lee (15-3, 3-0 RSC) ⬇️ #4 Marco Bernacci (11-3, 0-0 RSC) ⬇️ #5 Colm Dee (15-7, 0-0 RSC) #6 Jay Dorridge (12-4, 1-1 RSC) #7 Ryan Fenniman (11-2, 0-0 RSC) #8 Ronaldo Freitas (10-1, 3-1 RSC) #9 Louie Sullivan (10-1, 0-0 RSC) #10 Milovan Ajetovic (9-7, 0-0 RSC) Women’s Featherweight #1 Rachel McGuiness (12-4, 3-0 RSC) #2 Nora Bethlen (7-0, 3-0 RSC) #3 Annika Sjolin (7-1, 5-1 RSC) #4 Regina de Avila (6-2, 4-2 RSC) #5 Rosamaria Correa (8-2, 2-2 RSC) #6 Zofia Ivanov (4-1, 4-1 RSC) #7 Maja Krawczyk (4-1, 4-1 RSC) #8 Vasya Kaczmarek (9-3, 3-3 RSC) #9 Rugile Wisniewska (4-0, 1-0 RSC) #10 Diana Wozniak (4-0, 1-0 RSC) Women’s Bantamweight #1 Maya Komagata (12-0, 3-0 RSC) #2 Katie-Jayne Paulson (11-1, 3-0 RSC) #3 Rain Richards (17-1, 1-0 RSC) ⬆️ #4 Katarzyna Wojchiechowska (10-2, 3-1 RSC) ⬇️ #5 Thea Higgins (10-3, 2-0 RSC) #6 Tiiu Kass (12-2, 2-2 RSC) #7 Dorothy Gayle (8-3, 2-1 RSC) ⬆️ #8 Vicki Summers (10-6, 1-2 RSC) #9 Carmen Routhwaite (9-3, 2-3 RSC) ⬇️ #10 Agnieszka Hajek (4-2, 4-2 RC) Women’s Flyweight #1 Daljit Samir (14-2, 4-2 RSC) #2 Rennaya Rives (13-1, 3-1 RSC) #3 Manami Ken (12-2, 2-0 RSC) #4 Helena Broderick (10-2, 3-1 RSC) #5 Trish Biel (11-1, 3-1 RSC) #6 Shannon Palmer (12-3, 3-1 RSC) #7 Chisaki Gojo (10-3, 2-1) ⬆️ #8 Kimie Igarashi (9-3-1, 0-1-1 RSC) ⬇️ #9 Natasha Mellow (10-3, 2-2 RSC) ⬆️ #10 Maria Ferraz (9-4, 1-3 RSC) ⬆️
  17. RSC 39 Nouri vs Hojo Sunday, Week 4, February 2004 – Moscow, Russia Attendance: 553 Preliminary Card <table border="0" bgcolor=#DCDCDC><tr><td align="left" width = "780"> <details><summary></summary>Featherweight: Marvin Crews (CR#13, 4-1, 1-1 RSC) def. Stanislaw Popov (CR#17, 3-1, 1-1 RSC) via Submission (RNC) – Round 2 (4:44) [Fantastic] Featherweight: Adam Kucera (CR#19, 2-2, 2-2 RSC) def. Benoit LeMarche (CR#15, 5-2, 1-2 RSC) via Unanimous Decision [Decent] Women’s Flyweight: Ivana Kaminska (CR#21, 3-1, 0-1 RSC) def. Hazel McClay (CR#17, 9-6, 0-1 RSC) via Knock Out (Kick) – Round 2 (2:41) [Good] [McClay retired after the fight] Super Heavyweight: Zydrunas Sigauskas (CR#7, 4-1, 2-1 RSC) def. Hans Gorner (CR#13, 3-4, 1-4 RSC) via Submission (RNC) – Round 1 (4:57) [Great]</summary></details></details></td></tr></table></details> Main Card Women’s Bantamweight: Dorothy Gayle (WR#25, CR#9, 7-3, 1-1 RSC) def. Evelina Kovacic (CR#11, 3-3, 3-3 RSC) via TKO (Strikes) – Round 1 (4:02) [Great] Welterweight: Piotr Dabrowski (CR#8, 21-10, 2-2 RSC) def. Mando Romero (CR#9, 12-1, 2-1 RSC) via Submission (Kimura) – Round 1 (2:45) [Great] Featherweight: Rafael Tavares (CR#4, 18-6, 2-1 RSC) def. Ilya Fedorov (CR#11, 11-2, 2-2 RSC) via Submission (Armbar) – Round 1 (4:03) [Great] Light Heavyweight: Leandro Piquet (CR#4, 22-12, 1-1 RSC) def. Adrian Swall (CR#9, 11-4, 2-3 RSC) via Unanimous Decision [Decent] RSC Lightweight Championship: Motoki Hojo (CR#2, 22-8, 0-0 RSC) def. Georges Nouri (P4P#23, WR#5, CR#1, 18-3, 3-0 RSC) via KO (Punch) – Round 3 (4:25) [Good] - Absolute shocker in the main event as “The Wing Chun Superstar” Motoki Hojo was true to his nickname and managed to do what no one else has in RSC, take the Lightweight title off of George Nouri’s hands! Nouri was off to a hot start, suplexing his challenger to the mat and going through four different submission holds, with Hojo defending himself well against all of them before the referee reset the two fighters in the center. Perhaps getting a bit too confident, Nouri angled for a second takedown but got careless in the process, allowing Hojo to connect with a crunching straight right to his jaw that knocked him straight out. - Battle of the old guard in the co-main event as Brazil’s Leandro Piquet returned to the cage since losing to dos Santos by submission at RSC 26: dos Santos vs Piquet. His opponent was former RSC Light Heavyweight champion Adrian Swall at 35 years of age, just one year older than his opponent. The action saw Piquet use his Muay Thai strikes to hold Swall at bay, who would in turn attempt to grapple and muscle the Brazilian against the cage. Piquet would control the first half of each round while Swall dominated the second, however it was the third round that swung the judges’ opinion as Piquet managed to increase his control to nearly three thirds of the round, with Swall making a desperate run for it in the final minute. - Huge night for Simon Vine, who won the vacant RSC Welterweight Championship in his debut for the company. Vine was off to a rough start, taking multiple big rights and failing to trip his opponent, who he kept against the cage for the rest of the opening round in what seemed like a potential upset. The scene seemed to replay itself in the second, but this time Rossi was taken down successfully and hit multiple times with elbow shots, while an attempt to escape only saw him give up his back for the remainder of round two. With both fighters on even ground, round 3 kicked off but Vine seemed like he'd figured out Rossi by this point, immediately taking him down for more elbow shots before once more taking his back after a failed sweep. Rossi fended off the kimura but that exposed his head to several more elbow shots, with referee Martin Mills getting criticized for a potentially slow intervention to jump in and call for the TKO. - Former RSC Featherweight champion Rafael Tavares made his return since losing to Francesco Marazzina by submission at RSC 25: Biel vs Rives. He has tapped out Ilya Fedorov before at RSC 12: Swall vs Burgess in 2002 and he did so again, but for a brief moment it seemed like we would be seeing an upset. Fedorov managed to knock the Brazilian down but couldn’t quite finish him off as Tavares sprawled to safety and attempted a series of trips that Fedorov nicely defended against, until he no longer could. Once on the ground, it was only a matter of time before Tavares would squeeze a tap out of the Russian and he did just that, courtesy of an armbar. - Mando Romero may have won 3 of his 5 last fights via knockout, but it is no secret the Mexican boxer is weakest on the ground and that’s exactly what Piotr Dabrowski exploited. Romero tried to keep his opponent at bay but couldn’t resist throwing some heavy punches as well, the slower strikes creating the opportunity Dabrowski needed to shoot for the takedown that eventually allowed him to apply a kimura and get the tap. - An unexpected striking battle in the opener between Gayle and Kovacic, both of which are primarily wrestlers, it soon became clear why neither wanted to make a move first. Kovacic dedided to shoot first with roughly a minute left in the match, only for Gayle to sprawl and send her down on her knees. Making the best of her dodge, Gayle rained down the punches and got herself an easy TKO while fans needed to see it on replay to realize what had just transpired. Bonus Fight of the Night: Tavares vs Fedorov KO of the Night: Hojo vs Nouri Submission of the Night: Tavares vs Fedorov Post-Fight Motoki Hojo: "Feels great to win this, especially in my debut fight for RSC and in such a way, against such an opponent. Massive thanks to Dojo of Zui Quan for helping me achieve this, my sponsors and all my fans who believed in me." Leandro Piquet: ”Big thanks to my family, friends, supporters, sponsors and everyone at House of Pain. This was a tough fight and Swall has my respect, I really felt like I was in there with a championship caliber opponent.” Dorothy Gayle: ”Tiiu Kass will be the next one to be destroyed by this here hurricane!” Adam Kucera: ”Give me Saul Cervantes and I’ll beat him, under five minutes, I swear!”
  18. RSC expanding on the low end Following their RSC 38 Vine vs Rossi event, Red Star Combat officials announced the addition of two new weight classes for each gender. Men are getting the Bantamweight and Flyweight classes, while Strawweight and Atomweight have been added for women. RSC officials said they will be hiring fighters but fans will have to wait at least until May before they actually see any fights in those categories. Asked whether this might be the beginning of the end for the Super Heavyweight division, officials denied such plans, though the decision itself to focus on lighter weight classes is widely considered to be a response to the disappointing RSC Super Heavyweight fights so far. Pai Cheng joins Wudang Academy RSC's undefeated and longest reigning champion, the Emperor of their Heavyweight division, Pai Cheng, officially joined the Wudang Academy where he will be training for his future fights. Formerly a prominent member of the Singapore-based Tai Sheng Men Society, Cheng recently left the group of submission specialists feeling he had learned all he could from them. A proven master of technical grappling with a penchant for suplexes, Cheng is now out to work on his striking and conditioning, two areas the Wudang Academy and their brutal training regime are known for.
  19. QAW Crowning the Queen XI Date: Fri W3 Jul 2020 Location: Houston, TX Attendance: 603, Viewers: 14.977 Garcia: Ladies and gentlemen, fans of women’s wrestling around the world, welcome to our biggest show of the year live on the Women’s Wrestling Network, QAW Crowning the Queen! I’m Alfonso Garcia flying solo for now, as Farrah Hesketh is in the ring sporting the striped shirt while Boss Man Brayfield will be accompanying one of the teams in the opening match, but they will soon be joining me to call the action for the rest of the show. As always, he have a ton of action packed for you, a great match as Lilly & Rose defend their recently won WWC World Tag Team champions against the QAW veteran team that is Tex-Mex and of course, our grand Queen of the Ring tournament! with with The Rage vs Perez & Torres vs Payback Inc vs Anderson & Snyder Show kicked off with a four corners tag elimination match, a showcase of QAW’s tag team division in a night dominated by a singles tournament. Current and former title holders were in this, alongside the champions’ ongoing rivals Anderson & Snyder and the ever dangerous presence of Ronin 3 in the form of Payback Inc. The action was slow at first, giving fans and Alfonso Garcia alike the time and various matchups to establish the ongoing rivalries in this match. The Rage were the first team to be eliminated, with Marie Punnen taking a combined spinning back fist/leg sweep from Payback Inc for the pin, while Honey Badger was caught up chasing the sleazy Vinny Cruz around the ring. This cleared up the ring a bit, allowing Perez to hit some of her high flying lucha moves and get the fans going, but it ultimately backfired when she missed a dive and came up empty. Snyder jumped on the chance to eliminate the champions as Anderson hit a lariat on Torres on the apron to knock her out to ringside, bringing it down to Payback Inc. versus Anderson & Snyder. Barton and Parissi brought the brawling against their opponents’ technical genius and southern toughness for a pretty exciting finish, the end of which saw Parissi hit a swinging neckbreaker for the pin. Vinny Cruz joined them in the ring and celebrated like they’d just won the WWC World Tag Team titles, though he may not be far off as Parissi and Barton did the universal “title belt” gesture around their waists after the match, signalling they may be gunning for the titles of Perez & Torres after this victory. Winners: Payback Inc. 59 As the teams returned backstage while Hesketh and Brayfield resumed their positions on the announcers’ desk, a pre-taped message from Foxxy LaRue aired. LaRue: Tonight, I enter the Queen of the Ring tournament representing Ronin 3, but make no mistake, this is personal for me. Alina America stole my QAW World title and I’m gonna take it back. Step one is becoming Queen of the Ring tonight and securing a title shot. Once that’s done, I’m cashing in and reclaiming my gold. I got Vinny-man by my side, Ronin 3 to watch my back and I’m in it to win it, ‘cause I’m the baddest bitch in this business, baby! 59 Garcia: Strong words from the leader of Ronin 3 there, she lacks neither the skill nor the confidence, what do you think her odds are for winning the tournament tonight, Farrah? Hesketh: I think it’s going to be a long night of hard work for all participants, the competition is intense and on top of our QAW elites, we have a few wildcards like Catalina Vazquez who has been quite impressive in her short time with us or K.T. Devonshire all the way over from the UK, courtesy of our partners over there, Golden Goddesses of the Ring. Brayfield: I’m rooting for Hellcat Hernandez in this one, I am. She’s tough, she’s rough and, mark my words, she’s a future world champion. Alina America, Ashley Grover & Maria Guest vs Little Miss Perfect, Raquel Alvarado & Millie the Minx Going back to QAW’s lucha roots, this classic trios match was all action and very clear alignments, as three clean cut tecnicos took on three vile rudos. Maria Guest was very consistent from start to finish and Ashley Grover made the best out of her opportunity to be in this show after a loss to Ronin 3 prevented any members of The Line from participating in this year’s tournament. Both proved why Farrah Hesketh decided to mentor them and they even gave her a shout-out by pulling off a few of her signature moves, though Guest especially seemed to strike a chord with the audience, whether it was her happy go lucky antics while on offense or her underdog charm while getting beat up. Alvarado and Millie were quick to exploit that fact, using a mix of cheating, double teams and brutal brawling to garner heat from the fans. Little Miss Perfect looked like a perfect compliment to the duet, her youthful cockiness matching that of her teammates as did her tactics when she blind tagged herself in to score the pin on what she considered easy prey, only for Guest to somehow kick out at two. The QAW Shockwave champion continued to apply pressure on Guest with submission holds, but a rope break close to the tecnico corner allowed a tag to America, setting up a champion versus champion matchup, much to the audience’s roaring approval. Unwilling to square off with the top lady and potentially lose face, Little Miss Perfect retreated to tag in Millie the Minx to a hail of boos, showing a great heel mind by also depriving them of a promised exciting pairing. Millie ran in guns blazing but was easy pickings for the QAW World champion who was rested and unharmed so far, making short work of her opponent before tagging in Grover who hit a series of moves to set up her Chicago Hope finisher for the pin. Winners: Alina America, Ashley Grover & Maria Guest 46 Garcia: Much needed win for Ashley Grover, she must be very frustrated that she can’t be in this year’s Queen of the Ring tournament. Brayfield: Well she lost that right, fair and square. She took a chance and it didn’t pan out. When you gamble, you’re always accepting the risk of a potential loss. Hesketh: I like what I saw from all six luchadoras and I’ll agree with your assessment Alfonso, this does have a redemptive feel to it for Ashley Grover. Another pre-taped promo aired next, this time from the leader of The Furies, Emma May. May: It’s been a couple of months since my last match and that gave me the time to contemplate. Last time I was in a QAW ring, I lost to Pamela Rojo. Don’t get me wrong, she’s a great wrestler. She’s been around for a long time. She’s won everything there is to win, except for the World title. I respect her, but I have to be realistic. The only reason she beat me was because I got carried away. I got too caught up chasing a submission. This will not happen again. I am focused and I am coming into the tournament with my eyes set on becoming Queen of the Ring. I know Rojo’s gonna be in it too, so if we meet again, I’ll be happy to even the score. If not, I’ll still shoot for the top regardless. So girls in my bracket, you better watch out! 60 Garcia: Sounds like Emma May learned her lesson, truth is she’ll be one of the fresher competitors in the tournament, she’s had the time to rest and heal up. Brayfield: It’s an exhausting tournament, the finalists end up having wrestled three matches in a single night and the damage will pile up. That’s a big advantage she’s got coming into tonight. Hesketh: You are both correct, she’s rested and she’s upped her smarts, I’m sure she’ll be a very dangerous competitor and even if she doesn’t win, whoever manages to go through her will go on having paid a terrible price, courtesy of her killer MMA style. WWC World Tag Team titles match Lilly & Rose © vs Tex-Mex Wrapping up the first part of the show before the tournament singles matches, Kate Lilly and Debbie Rose put their recently won WWC World Tag Team titles on the line against two time QAW Tag Team champions, Tex-Mex in what turned out to be an early candidate for match of the night, nearly stealing the show outright. With both teams being athletic and well versed in working in tandem, they made the best use of it to deliver some spectacular moments, like the one where Perez hopped off the top turnbuckle, used her bent over partner as a stepping stone and delivered a long range dropkick across the ring square in Rose’s jaw. The champions were no slouches either and the shot of them swan diving over the top rop in a double tope suicida to the outside is bound to feature in magazines, promo shots and video packages for quite some time. There was walking the top rope, there were all the usual lucha flips and rolls and arm drags, a super rana off the turnbuckles from Lilly and after a spectacular ten minute match, Debbie Rose hit the Thorn Cutter on Teresa Perez to score her team’s first successful title defense. Winners: Lilly & Rose (Defenses: 1) 54 Garcia: What a match! Lilly & Rose deliver a true world caliber championship performance but take nothing away from Tex-Mex who were able to keep up like this! Hesketh: I’m just proud to have both teams on the QAW roster and listen to these fans cheering for both these teams, that’s what it’s all about at the end of the day. Brayfield: That’s all nice, but the show’s called Queen of the Ring and that’s what we’re here for so let’s get these matches going! Unlike the other tournament competitors earlier, Danielle Sweetheart made her entrance and delivered her promo in person while inside the ring. Sweetheart: I said it last month, I’ll say it again. QAW is full of factions and gangs and alliances of all sorts. It’s a complicated thing to navigate. I’m entering this year’s tournament on my own, with no one to fall back to. No one to watch my back. But that’s fine. And it’s not because I failed at the backstage politics game. It’s because I don’t play that game. I’m a wrestler, not a politician or diplomat. This is a wrestling ring, it’s neither a political convention, nor some back alley for gangs to square off. So I’m playing it straight, but I’m also issuing a challenge to all my fellow participants. Keep your friends out of these matches. Stick to the wrestling. Let’s give these fans the best tournament we can because that’s what they deserve! 65 Garcia: Danielle Sweetheart is in the house! This is her tournament and these are her fans, listen to them chant her name and the match hasn’t even started! Hesketh: She’s not afraid to speak her mind and she’s out here to play it straight. She expects her opponents to do the same. Brayfield: What are you talking about?! This is war! If you have allies, you don’t tell them to keep their troops at home! It’s foolish to not use what you’ve got and I, for one, am seeing right through that woman’s mind games! Queen of the Ring Quarterfinal match Danielle Sweetheart vs K.T. Devonshire Devonshire represented GGOTR and their “All the Queen’s Women” faction in the tournament, but none of it mattered because as soon as she made her entrance, because as soon as her music played and she came out, all the fans could see was a Russian character. Whipped into a frenzy as they were from Sweetheart’s promo earlier, they flew into a “USA” chant, thrusting this match all the way back to how wrestling was in the 80s. Playing it by ear, Sweetheart went with the crowd and hammed up her patriotism as she got to work on her opponent, before Devonshire went full sneaky heel to poke her eye and gain control of the match. Still mostly unknown to the audience, Devonshire did not overstay her welcome and Sweetheart made her comeback to hit a Superkick and wrap this up at just five and a half minutes total. Winner: Danielle Sweetheart 47 Garcia: Well Sweetheart was the favourite to win here, but props to K.T. Devonshire for even getting inside the ring with a legitimate QAW legend! Brayfield: That commie never stood a chance. Hesketh: Danielle Sweetheart advances and she’ll be waiting to find out who her next opponent will be, when Foxxy LaRue faces off against Pamela Rojo but for now, we’ve got Emma May taking on another wildcard in the tournament, CILL’s standout export, Catalina Vazquez! Queen of the Ring Quarterfinal match Catalina Vazquez vs Emma May Vazquez hit the ground running, doing her absolute best to impose a fast pace in this match and keep things moving. Well aware that she had to avoid her opponent’s strikes and mat game, the Mexican star used her graceful lucha libre style for some hit and run tactics as well as some big moves that popped the crowd. May took the blows and seemed to pace herself, looking for an opening in her opponent’s game plan that she could exploit, much like a tiger or leopard patiently waits for the opportune moment to jump at their prey. Vazquez got most of the offense and a cheering approval from the fans, looking good until May made her move, springing like a coiled viper to shoot for her opponent’s leg and take her to the mat. Seconds later, she had the Heel Hook locked in and Vazquez immediately tapped from the intense pain, a quick and frighteningly efficient win for Emma May who advanced to the Semifinal. Winner: Emma May 50 Garcia: That’s all Emma May needed, give her a chance and she’ll tap you out, that was several minutes before the ten minute mark. Hesketh: Seven thirty eight is the official time in this match, swift win for May but kudos to Vazquez for a stunning performance. Brayfield: Stunning or not, it’s May who advances and that’s all that matters: Winning! Queen of the Ring Quarterfinal match Hellcat Hernandez vs Juana Hurricane Given the history between the leaders of The Furies and Storm Front, this was an extremely personal match and it showed in the intensity on display. Hernandez brought her street savvy wild brawling and did not hold back, with Hurricane responding with a mix of stiff strikes. The opening exchange led to a suplex competition, with plenty of counters and standing switches as the two women dropped each other on their necks. The stalemate was broken by the appearance of Felicia Luck, who made her presence known at ringside, initially in an attempt to distract Hernandez while openly raising her hands to claim innocence and deflect the scrutiny of referee Dwight Kumas. Of course, this wasn’t meant to last and as soon as she had a chance, Felicia Luck took it and grabbed Hurricane’s hair to slam her head against the steel ring post. Sonnaz Shah came out to throw herself in the mix and brawl outside the ring with Luck, but it was the shocking return of Alexis Lee Littlefeather that really turned the tide. The Native American veteran, who hadn’t been seen since she passed out in a chokehold by Hellcat Hernandez at American Lucha back in March, got a hero’s return as fans cheered her on with “welcome back” chants. Trying to assert his authority, the referee implored all the non-participants to return backstage but for his troubles, he was rewarded with a superkick to the back of the head by Hellcat Hernandez. Hurricane had numbers on her side now and with the ref out, Littlefeather had her chance at revenge but she opted out of it, garnering more cheers from the fans as she backed away from a helpless Hernandez. Hurricane jumped at the opportunity to slap on the Times-Square Lock and Hernandez tapped out alright, but the ref was still out and the match would go on. Frustrated, Farrah Hesketh jumped in the ring and took over as referee, banning all outsiders from the match and setting up a clean stage for the final exchange, in which Hurricane reversed her opponent’s attempt at a finisher back into the Times-Square Lock. This time Hernanez fought it but couldn’t do so for too long. Hurricane won via submission and Storm Front got their redemption for all the trouble the Clenched Fist had given them. Winner: Juana Hurricane 51 Garcia: Superb match, Hurricane takes this one and advances to the semifinals! Brayfield: That’s cheating! Farrah Hesketh can’t take over as a ref whenever she feels like it! Garcia: Well now we have one pair of the semifinals locked down, it’ll be Juana Hurricane versus Emma May, let’s find out whether Danielle Sweetheart will be facing Pamela Rojo or Foxxy LaRue next! Queen of the Ring Quarterfinal match with Pamela Rojo vs Foxxy LaRue (with Vinny Cruz) Rojo came into this match fresh off a big loss in a title match against Alina America, but as the announcing trio pointed out -and it took them a second to figure this out- LaRue’s last match was back in April, when Ronin 3 beat The Line in a trios match where the losers would not be taking part in the Queen of the Ring tournament. Despite having a clear edge, LaRue fell victim to her own overconfidence, underestimating her opponent and talking trash she would pay by losing control of the match and, more often than not, get suplexed to the mat. Rojo was foaming at the mouth, gunning for a big win that would help her bounce back from her loss to Alina America but Vinny Cruz was yet again there for his trio, distracting the referee or putting LaRue’s foot on the ropes to interrupt a pinning predicament. Eventually, he got under the skin of Rojo who grabbed the lapels of his suit and treated him to a headbutt that popped the crowd, but this only made things easier for LaRue to deliver the Flash Head Kick and steal the match. Winner: Foxxy LaRue 54 Garcia: LaRue advances in typical Ronin 3 fashion… She’s such a great wrestler, I just don’t know why she keeps resorting to such cheap actions. Brayfield: Because they bring her victory, that’s why. Honor is for losers, Alfonso. You wouldn’t know what it takes to make a true champion. Hesketh: Well that ends the quarterfinal stage, LaRue better run back to the locker room and get some rest in light of her clash with Danielle Sweetheart. Meanwhile, the first pair of that phase is up next as Juana Hurricane takes on Emma May! Queen of the Ring Semifinal match Emma May vs Juana Hurricane Both women bore the scars of their earlier battles, so there was little running around or flying about in this match. May’s stiff strikes and submission holds were up against Hurricane’s wide array of slams and suplexes in what turned out to be a pretty exciting contest, a game of chicken between two unyielding personalities. Plenty of chain wrestling on display with holds, counterholds and reversals, including the finish where May attempted another Heel Hook, Hurricane countered in an attempt to set up the Times-Square Lock but eventually ending up trapped in a Triangle Choke she tapped out to, sending Emma May to the tournament finals. Winner: Emma May 55 Garcia: May wins it! She will be in the finals! Hesketh: She has never been crowned Queen of the Ring or won the QAW World title, this is her big chance and imagine what must be going through her head right now. Brayfield: I’ll tell you what’s going through her head, resting and healing up as she prepares for her last match. Whether she faces Sweetheart or LaRue, it’s going to be a tough match and she needs to focus on that instead of daydreaming like you two. Queen of the Ring Semifinal match with Danielle Sweetheart vs Foxxy LaRue (with Vinny Cruz) Probably the longest and best match of the show, this one almost hit the fifteen minute mark as Sweetheart and LaRue squared off in an epic battle. Having clearly seen what transpired earlier, referee Erin Lawrence was quick to eject Vinny Cruz as soon as he made his first move, sending him backstage to keep this clean, something fans wholeheartedly approved judging by their reaction. This removal allowed the match to focus on actual wrestling and highlight both competitors’ skills, although alas, it was not meant to be for too long. Even if Vinny Cruz wasn’t around to help, Becca Barton and Toni Parissi stepped up to assist the leader of Ronin 3, which they did in a pretty creative fashion: one would catch the eye of the ref, allowing the other to interfere with the match undetected. Their plan eventually fell apart though when Sweetheart figured it out and superkicked Barton off the apron. Without her teammate to provide cover, Parissi could not get involved in the match as easily and get away with it. Still, she made the best of her presence to distract Sweetheart, allowing LaRue to pull off a Flash Head Kick, which Sweetheart somehow kicked out of! Shocked, LaRue went twice to the well with a second attempt, but this time Sweetheart burst into action with a surge of adrenaline and was able to intercept the move with a superkick of her own that knocked LaRue out for the three count. Winner: Danielle Sweetheart 62 Garcia: Sweetheart wins against the odds and QAW fans are going absolutely crazy! Brayfield: That was pure luck, if you ask me. Hesketh: And here comes Emma May running to the ring, she wants to get this match started before Sweetheart can pull herself back together! Queen of the Ring Final match Danielle Sweetheart vs Emma May May’s plan actually made sense, since her matches through the night were shorter and she’d taken less damage in comparison. This had her in full control and taking her time to pick Sweetheart apart with clinical precision, using MMA ruthlessness but at a slower, more tormenting pro wrestling pace. Sweetheart screamed her lungs out with every submission and more than once, May was all too happy to shut her up with a stiff kick to the head. It was after blocking one of those kicks and pulling the leg to whip May to the mat that Sweetheart got a comeback. Every move she hit felt urgent as well as desperate, because she also looked like it took a heavy toll on her to do so. Partially true due to her accrued damage, this also helped garner sympathy from the fans who truly wanted to see her push through and pull an upset against the odds. May would, of course, shoot that down as soon as she was able to exploit her opponent’s exhaustion, blocking a superkick and taking her to the mat for the Heel Hook, which Sweetheart barely managed to slide out of before it was locked in for good. The two women reset, May giving a nod of grudging respect to her opponent’s toughness before they locked up again. Sweetheart got control into a side headlock, but her offense was soon reversed and she found herself on the mat, trapped in May’s Triangle Choke. Too spent to escape or reverse it, Sweetheart showed great ring awareness by managing to get a foot on the ropes and force a break. The two reset once more, this time Sweetheart exploding straight into a superkick that nearly knocked out her opponent’s teeth, sending fans into an explosion of sound as the move connected, then counting along for the one two three. Winner: Danielle Sweetheart 59 Garcia: She did it! She did it again! Danielle Sweetheart reclaims the crown and she is now a five time Queen of the Ring! Brayfield: Shame for Emma May, close but no cigar. Hesketh: If you’ll excuse me gentlemen, I’ve got some official business to attend... Leaving the announcers’ table to get in the ring, Farrah Hesketh joined Commissioner Bomb to present the Queen of the Ring trophy to this year’s winner, Danielle Sweetheart. An emotional finish to the show, Sweetheart raised the trophy for the fifth time in her career, last one being 2016, yet again earning her nickname as the Queen of Hearts. 53 Show Rating 59
  20. Thank you very much. FYI I'm away from home (read: the desktop I've got TEW licensed on) for a few weeks so with only the trial version on my laptop I'm trying to space it out and keep a low pace. February show has been done and is already half written. Thank you for your patience.
  21. <div style="padding: 15px; border: 3px solid #000000; margin:10px;background: #2C2A2A; max-width:60%;box-shadow: 0 6px 12px ";"> BCG Survivor 2020 Press Conference Highlights ~ Much to unravel in this Press Conference, but of course the big news was the brand new BCG World champion SUKI and his four potential challengers who will have to go through the four corners match in the main event of the Survivor show in order to get to him. Okamoto will be the smallest man in that match, but after a spectacular -albeit losing- effort against Funakoshi and a recent win over Torii, he seems back in track and on the rise again. He could be the one to pull off an upset victory and winning this year's Survivor match would certainly be a step in the right direction to climbing back up on top of the mountain with a second chance at gold. Matsushita is coming off an impressive performance at this year's Yoshifusa Maeda Grand Prix and a big win over Tanyu Toshusai to earn his spot in the match over him. The other big man is Big Bruiser Findlay, finalist of the Grand Prix looking for a second chance against SUKI, now with the title on the line, after having wrapped up his ongoing rivalry with former teammate, Animal Harker. Last but not least, Mabuchi Furusawa will be heading into that match in what has been an intense year between him and SUKI. Effective teammates at first, the former GCG stars broke up after Furusawa's injury and he had to play catch up. Frustrated with his weakness, SUKI shot forward and the former teammates finally imploded after SUKI's title win with a brawl backstage, meaning that of all four competitors, Furusawa is the one with a more personal story, one that's bound to drive him to put on his best performance for a victory. ~ Speaking of Furusawa, his two proteges, Danjuro Kikuchi and Ginji Kisaka, alongside the latter's usual tag team partner Ikki Hosaka, were officially presented as Furusawa-gun, a group under the mentorship of Mabuchi Furusawa. Though currently consisting of only him and three young lions, it will be interesting to see if any other big names join the faction eventually. ~ Kadonomaro Kamisaka and Kiyotaka also had a spot, with their team officially rebranded as "3K" out of their names' initials. Despite some criticism on the flashiness and sports entertainment feel of the move, it was mostly received well, as it is a much easier word to use instead of repeating the two men's names. ~ Finally, Toshinobu Taku announced that he will be hanging up his wrestling boots by the end of the summer. At 53 years of age, the 35 year old veteran's decision was not surprising and he is expected to remain employed by Black Canvas as a backstage assistant and road agent. </div>
  22. Quick update, to let you know this diary is still alive. I'm away from home (read: the desktop I've got TEW licensed on) for a few weeks so with zero backlog of shows left, I only have the Press Conference for the next tour to do so I'm trying to space it out, keep a low pace till I can run shows again. Thank you.
  23. Ah, and we're finally caught up. Thanks for the shout-out as well. Here are my predictions: 1ST MATCH 30 MINUTE TIME LIMIT Hirokazu Yamanoue, Eien Miyamoto, & Nobuyo Hikichi VS. Magnum Kobe, Toyota Munakata, & Daigo Goya 2ND MATCH 30 MINUTE TIME LIMIT Masaru Ugaki, Ryoma Muruyama, & Gonnohyoe Kada VS. Kazushige Matsuki, Haranobu Kobayashi, & Tsurayuki Kamachi 3RD MATCH 60 MINUTE TIME LIMIT PGHW HISTORICAL JAPAN TITLE MATCH ©Avalanche Takano VS. SATO 4TH MATCH 30 MINUTE TIME LIMIT Kozue Kawashima, Noriyori Sanda, Goeman Komiya, & Mamoru Nagahama VS. Tetsunori Yasuda, William Hayes, Stone Yoshikawa, & Hirobumi Takimoto 5TH MATCH 60 MINUTE TIME LIMIT PGHW INTERNATIONAL TITLE MATCH ©Reaver VS. Danny Cavanagh 6TH MATCH 60 MINUTE TIME LIMIT PGHW GLORY TAG CROWN ©Brute Kikuchi & BISON Yano VS. KitoGuchi (Chojiro Kitoaji & Bussho Makiguchi) 7TH MATCH 60 MINUTE TIME LIMIT PGHW GLORY CROWN ©Seiji Jimbo VS. Akinori Kwakami
  24. Thank you. I am told Dave Grohl was involved in that song (album?) so that might explain the sound. I personally enjoy from their recent (2011) album. Where did you find this old footage of me waiting for the Women's Revolution mod? Welcome, nice to have you around. Hope you enjoy the joshi deathmatch action!
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