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<p>2005 TCW save</p><p> </p><p>

I just played the first month of a 2005 CVerse database save as the booker of TCW, Liberty.</p><p> </p><p>

A patriotic face Peter Valentine, (gulp), was set to challenge Cornell for the World Title but got injured for 2 months about 10 days before Psycho Circus 2005. In stepped upper midcarder Troy Tornado to replace Valentine for the PPV. Tornado was the lead singer of Painful Procedure(Ronnie V Pain, drummer, main-event auto push, along with tag champs Randall Hopkirk and BJ Shearer and manager FLoyd Goldworthy). Tornado wasn't fitting in well with the rest of the band. At Psycho Circus after losing the main event World Title match to Cornell the band all turned on Tornado with Pain powerbombing him through the drumset that was still on stage from their earlier performance.</p><p> </p><p>

Now Tornado will feud with his former bandmates. Speaking of the bandmates, earlier on the PPV Shearer and Hopkirk lost the tag titles to Demons Of Rage, who are both firmly in time decline.</p><p> </p><p>

Liberty(James Justice) beat BLZ Bubb(Tyson Baine) to become the #1 contender and will face Cornell for the World Title at the next PPV, Malice In Wonderland 2006.</p><p> </p><p>

Madman Boone is the Hardcore Champ, Croc Hunter C.A.( Clark Alexander in a Hawaiian Croc Hunter gimmick)is the All Action Champ. </p><p> </p><p>

Rick Law lost his International Title to Robert Oxford during December and was unable to win it back at the PPV due to interference from Joel Bryant. Bryant, Oxford and Paul Steadyfast are in the newly formed Chase Agency, lead by Emma Chase of course.</p><p> </p><p>

BLZ Bubb, Demon Anger, Demon Spite and Raul & Jay Darkness have formed a Ministry-like stable.</p><p> </p><p>

Also, TCW fell to cult size after the first 2 shows. I brought in Rock Downpour & Rob Miskovsky to add to the announce teams and made Saturday Night Showcase the B show. I signed Big Cat Brandon(James) and Kurt Laramee to ppa deals. I also brought in The Good Ol Boys, The McWade Brothers, Jesse Christian, and Bob Casey(under a mask).</p>

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<p>Just held Total Mayhem X(2006)</p><p> </p><p>

Dark Angel defeated Steve Gumble© in an Overhead Wires match for the TCW X Division title</p><p> </p><p>

The Chase Agency(Bryan Holmes & Johnny Bloodstone w/Emma Chase) defeated The Stone Brothers(Dan Stone Jr & Duane Stone)© for the TCW World Tag Team titles</p><p> </p><p>

Rick Law© defeated BLZ Bubb© in a 1 vs 1 Falls Count Anywhere match to retain the TCW International title and to win the TCW Hardcore title</p><p> </p><p>

Angry Gilmore defeated Tommy Cornell© for the TCW World Heavyweight title</p>

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<blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="Lo-Drew" data-cite="Lo-Drew" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41343" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>Yeah it's the biggest show of the year for TCW.</div></blockquote><p> </p><p> </p><blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="Matt_Black" data-cite="Matt_Black" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41343" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>There's also a War Games element, too.</div></blockquote><p> </p><p> </p><blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="Kingster" data-cite="Kingster" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41343" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>There's also the "Total Mayhem" match in the database. As Matt_Black mentioned, it's a match similar to the "War Games" match.</div></blockquote><p> </p><p> Oh, alright. Thanks!</p>
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<blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="BrokenCycle" data-cite="BrokenCycle" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41343" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>Be aware though that the Total Mayhem match is set to be a National match type. If you've dropped to Cult by then, you can't run it. Go in the in-game editor and fix it.</div></blockquote><p> </p><p> Lucky thing that I'm still at a national level three months into the game.</p>
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<blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="MrSelfDestruct" data-cite="MrSelfDestruct" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41343" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>Total Mayhem is a ball to book, all about creativity as there isn't exactly a set guideline to follow</div></blockquote><p> </p><p> The only real guidelines- for the PPV itself, remember, it's set up as a season finale, so you'll want to end most of the major storylines and start some new ones there.</p><p> </p><p> For the match, it's brawl based, so you'll ideally want wrestlers who are rated as Good Brawlers or better. You can use those who aren't, but they'll complain afterwards.</p>
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  • 5 months later...
So, I started a new game, and only 3 Time Declines on the starting roster- RDJ, Joel Bryant, & Giant Tana. Hired Marat Khoklov, and he is not in Time Decline. And Eddie Peak took on Killer Shark as a protege. Never seen that happen before, but I'll take it! As a bonus, the Wrestling Industry in the U.S. is at 74 and rising. Not a bad start!
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  • 5 months later...

I'm playing a game at the moment which is the furthest I've got with a big fed for ages (not hard, I usually flake in the first month) and really loving it. I'll try and post some updates here for the big shows.

 

Malice In Wonderland

 

Wolf Hawkins beat Joshua Taylor (B) - These two had issues stemming from Hawkins using a handful of tights to pin Taylor in a big eight-man match early in the month. Go-home Total Wrestling show for the PPV saw the pair team with Aaron Andrews and Rocky Golden to brawl to a double count-out. In this match, Hawkins was just too good for Taylor.

 

Giant Tana won a battle royal (B-) - pretty much everyone not booked elsewhere ended up in this match, with the exception of Troy Tornado. Edd Stone and Jay Chord were the first eliminated. They'd been having issues for weeks, with both men taking part in the Saturday Night Showcase series, a 12 man tournament in which the eventual winner would get a title shot of their choice in April. Chord had declared he was born to win gold and walk into Total Mayhem as the champion, with Stone having some harsh words about Chord's 'alcoholic father', saying that as a member of the legendary Stone dynasty, HE was the one born for success. Chord would interrupt Stone's Showcase series match against Elliot Thomas, giving Thomas the shock roll-up win over Edd, and Stone interrupted Jay's International title shot at Marc Speed by playing Rip Chord's music and staggering down to the ring, doing a drunken impression of the legend, causing his son to lose focus and get trapped in the Cross-Armbreaker. The two men's frustration with each other boiled over and they fought over the ropes and to the back pretty much immediately.

 

Mighty Mo was one of the stars of the battle royal, eliminating seven people, including the returning (on a one-shot) veteran Paul Steadyfast. Tana would eliminate Joel Bryant to get it down to the two big men, who'd been teaming a little bit, and the pair would shake hands before going at it, the Samoan hiptossing his opponent to the ring apron then clotheslining him off for the victory.

 

Marc Speed beat Giant Tana for the International title © - Unfortunately for Tana, his title shot would come pretty much immediately, and while he was panting for breath after a long match, Marc Speed was fresh as a daisy. The TCW International champion retained his belt, forcing the big man to tap to the Cross Armbreaker.

 

Sammy Bach and Danny Fonzarelli beat Eddie Peak and Bryan Vessey. (B) - Peak took exception to Sammy Bach's description of Vessey as "The biggest bully in TCW", saying that he was far more of a threat than Vessey would ever be. For a month, Vessey and Peak BOTH attacked Bach whenever they could, until he challenged them to a tag match. Fonzarelli would be brought in as his partner, and the relatively smooth teamwork of the faces ended up making the difference, with the heels arguing too much to retain an advantage, and Peak eventually missing Bach with a lariat to blast Vessey to the outside. A desperate Peak hurled himself on the big man rather than try and make it across to tag Fonz in, and Eddie tapped out to Bach on Your Back. Post-match, Peak and Vessey brawled, both blaming each other for the loss, much to their opponent's amusement.

 

Human Arsenal beat Brent Hill (B) - The former partners were on a collision course when Arsenal took exception to Hill routinely applying submission holds until opponents had passed out, risking severely injuring them, and encouraging wrestlers like Mark Speed to do the same thing. Hill taunted Arsenal for losing his killer instinct, and the pair eventually agreed that the fed was no longer big enough for both ex-Machines, leading to this Loser Leaves Town match. Arsenal takes the victory. Post-match, the pair shake hands an embrace, turning Hill (who's headed to my developmental fed as a trainer) face.

 

Troy Tornado beat Roy Edison (C+) - Troy Tornado claimed he was the only man in TCW to be left off the card, and issued an open challenge to ANYONE to come face him and change that. "I don't care if you're in the back, if you already wrestled, if you're in the crowd, ANYONE." Former MMA star Roy Edison took him at his word and looked pretty good in a competitive ten minute bout, although Tornado's Star Maker prove to be the difference.

 

RDJ beat American Buffalo (B-) - The pair had been feuding for months, since Buffalo put RDJ on the shelf for eight weeks late last year. Ricky beat the big guy here in a match which left them both tired, but definitely got the crowd into it. Despite Goldworthy's attempts to cheat by distracting the referee, a Southern Justice was the difference. Unfortunately, Johnson picked up a strained rotator cuff during the match.

 

Rocky Golden beat Aaron Andrews for the TCW World Heavyweight title (B+) - I had to do it, partly because Andrews didn't have long left on his contract. The two fired off some killer promos on the way to the match, and while it was hampered by a lack of selling, the bout - won by Rocky after he caught Andrews's hand as Ace tried to blast him with brass knuckles, then lifted him into the Rack for the submission win - was still fantastic.

 

Overall rating: A.

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<blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="DatIsraeliGuy" data-cite="DatIsraeliGuy" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41343" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>How on earth did you get an A on the first Malice is beyond me. <p> </p><p> RDJ vs. Buffalo getting anything more than a C is pretty impressive, how's the time decline looking like?</p></div></blockquote><p> </p><p> As it's a historic event, I slammed money into extras - B list celebrity, local band, and $250k special set, which all probably helped a little. Taylor's Legendary gimmick probably helped; looking at my top matches that was the best of the B grades and I'm guessing reasonably close to a B+. I also got most people in my big few matches on decent momentum through wins over guys who'd end up in the battle royal in either singles or tag matches. (RDJ was 6-0 for the month, including dark matches, and Buffalo was 5-2, with one loss coming in a tag match where Justice Jolson was pinned as he and Buffalo took on RDJ and Tana.)</p><p> </p><p> Hill was the person who time decline hit hardest, but RDJ is 7 years past his prime, Fonz 5 years past his, and Vessey/Nate Johnson a few years past theirs. Not horrendous by any means. Some great hot prospects around too - fairly sure Edd Stone and Jay Chord will be established headliners within 12 months, with Mighty Mo not far behind them, and Matt Hocking and Killer Shark both having huge upsides although they're more long term plans.</p>
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TCW The War To Settle The Score

 

Troy Tornado beat Joshua Taylor (B) - Tornado got a win over Taylor in the first week of February, but needed a handful of tights to do so. Taylor said that he didn't think Troy could beat him cleanly, but Troy proved him wrong here.

 

Marc Speed and Elliot Thomas went to a time limit draw in an International title match (C-) - Thomas got a win over Speed in the Saturday Night Showdown series, but the match wasn't for the title. Elliot challenged the champion here in the hope of repeating, but time ran out for him here.

 

Jay Chord beats Edd Stone. (B) - Lots happened for these two this month. The pair fought to a double count-out in the second Total Wrestling of February, while Chord and Marc Speed came close to a shock upset win over the New Wave for the tag titles the following week. Back in January, Edd Stone's girl Vita had recruited the Elite to join the Canadian Animals as a stable, but Stone lost patience with the rest of the stable after a six man tag where he teamed with the Elite against the Paratroopers, developmental fed talents. When Nate Johnson kept a hold locked on Zack Rudge after he'd submitted, Stone told him to break it, and eventually took matters in to his own hand and blasted the veteran with a kick to the face. Huggins would accuse Stone of being a stupid do-gooder like the rest of his family, leaving Stone to suggest they had different values now and should end the team gracefully. Huggins was less keen on the graceful ending and challenged Stone to a match at War, only for Stone to point out he'd already got one set up with Chord. "Just because we're not looking for the same thing any more, Freddy," he said. "We don't have to be at each other's throats, or anything. I got no reason to fight you."

 

Well, after this match, Edd may have changed his mind. A hard fought contest seemed to have gone his way when he managed to put Jay Chord down with a massive superkick, but the ref had taken a bump and was recovering in the corner. As Stone climbed up top ready to hit a big aerial move and finish it, Huggins struck, shoving him off the ropes, letting Chord recover and hit the Cradle Piledriver for the victory!

 

Eddie Peak beat Danny Fonzarelli (B-) - Peak lost a match with Bryan Vessey in which the winner would get a singles bout against Sammy Bach, with both men still wanting to take on Bach. He was then challenged by Bach's friend Danny Fonzarelli, but the Great White Shark proved far too strong for the Love Doctor, beating him easily with the Peak of Perfection then brutalising him post-match.

 

Sammy Bach beat Bryan Vessey (B+) - Vessey defeated Peak to get this match, but couldn't go on to beat the Rock God. The pair both fought well, but eventually Sammy locked on the Bach on Your Back for the submission victory.

 

Ricky Dale Johnson beat American Buffalo (C+) - Buffalo wanted a rematch with RDJ, Floyd Goldworthy claiming that the way they'd injured Johnson last time around showed that he needed to give up and retire gracefully. Johnson said he'd done everything he needed to in getting past AB, but Floyd eventually offered the babyface five minutes alone with him in the ring if he could beat Buffalo. When Johnson said that Floyd would just get one of his men to come in and save him, the manager said he'd get EVERY member of the TCW staff and roster to sign a contract saying they wouldn't interfere in those 5 minutes, and they'd be fired if they did so! Johnson would win the match fairly easily, but the stip would come back to haunt him, as he got Floyd in the ring only to be attacked by the debuting MARAT KHOKLOV, with nobody able to interfere for five minutes to make the save. (I feel bad booking a major babyface to be THIS dumb, but I liked it as a way of introducing Marat.) (C+)

 

Wolf Hawkins beat Human Arsenal (B+) - This 28 minute match was a classic. Hawkins went on a tear through various midcarders, hitting three finishers on them before making the pin, much to Arsenal's displeasure. Arsenal challenged Wolf but was turned down, with Floyd Goldworthy eventually persauding Hawkins to take the match in exchange for Arsenal signing the 'no interference in the 5 minutes' contract. Arsenal fought incredibly hard against the major heel, but Wolf ended up with the victory.

 

Rocky Golden beat Aaron Andrews (B) - Andrews cashed in his rematch clause here, but was unable to regain the title, while the match wasn't quite as good as January's. Fairly standard competitive win for Rocky. (Andrews's contract was about to expire, and I was clearly never going to beat USPW out for him, so decided to just give him one more main event shot here to put Rocky over strongly.)

 

Overall show rating: B+

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<div style="text-align:center;"><p><strong>TCW Just Another Day?</strong></p></div><p></p><p> </p><p>

<strong>New Wave beat Vessey and Aaron. (B)</strong> - Aaron Andrews and Troy Tornado won a triple threat tag match for a shot at the belts, beating Benny Benson/Bart Biggins and Mighty Mo/Giant Tana. However since Andrews scored the pinfall, he was the one who got to choose who his partner would be, and much to Tornado's disgust, ditched him for Vessey, citing Vessey's long experience as a tag wrestler. Unfortunately, it wasn't enough to get Ace the win he wanted here, while Tornado got revenge earlier in the month by beating him in solo action. Andrews jobs in his last match for me.</p><p> </p><p>

<strong>Edd Stone beat Freddy Huggins (B) </strong>- This pair had been at each other's throats all month, following Stone's loss to Jay Chord at The War To Settle The Score. The Canadian Animals look to be dead and buried as a team now, but the great chemistry shown by this pair in a fantastic all-out match filled with high spots suggests there may be more to come from them as opponents.</p><p> </p><p>

<strong>Troy Tornado beat Mario Heroic (C+)</strong> - For the second time in 3 months, Tornado found himself without an opponent for the PPV, this time after being ditched as a tag partner by Andrews. As he did in January, he issued an open challenge, answered in this case by The Enigmatic One, who'd been away from wrestling for a long period of time prior to this match. Heroic's ring rust showed here, but he did a good job of putting Troy over.</p><p> </p><p>

<strong>Jay Chord beat Mighty Mo (B)</strong> - Mo beat Chord in an excellent Saturday Night Showcase main at the start of the month, as part of the Saturday Night Series, in addition to later teaming with Edd Stone and the New Wave to beat Chord, Huggins and The Elite. Chord was after revenge and got it here, proving too good for Mo in an excellent contest.</p><p> </p><p>

<strong>Marat Khoklov beat Danny Fonzarelli © </strong>- Fairly dominant squash here for Marat, with Fonzarelli's friendship with RDJ leading to him taking this match.</p><p> </p><p>

<strong>Marc Speed beat Elliot Thomas to retain the International title. (B)</strong> Speed and Thomas continued their feud this month, the highlight being Thomas getting a huge shock win over Troy Tornado after Speed hit him when trying to attack the babyface. However the International champion here finally managed to defeat Elliot in solo action, forcing him to tap out to the Cross Armbreaker.</p><p> </p><p>

<strong>Sammy Bach beat Eddie Peak. (B)</strong> - Bach had been on a roll since his big win over Bryan Vessey, beating Aaron Andrews and teaming with Rocky Golden to defeat Khoklov and Peak - although admittedly that was helped by heel miscommunication, as Marat put down Eddie with his devastating Russian Lariat when Sammy ducked. He continued to shine here, locking on Bach On Your Back for a submission win. Earlier in the month, Bach had said he wanted to fight Marat Khoklov to get revenge for RDJ - Floyd Goldworthy had told him to concentrate on Peak, but post-match here, the big Russian attacked him, suggesting that his manager has decided he's ready for the two to face off.</p><p> </p><p>

<strong>Rocky Golden beat Wolf Hawkins. (A) </strong>- Wolf challenged Rocky at the start of the month, saying his win over Human Arsenal showed he was ready to get back into the title race. Golden accepted, and Hawkins went on something of a tear since then, beating Edd Stone, Benny Benson and Joshua Taylor in very good matches. This pair beat the living daylights out of each other in an excellent brawl - but when the dust settled, Rocky remained the champion, getting a massive running powerslam to just about keep Wolf down for the three count!</p><p> </p><p>

</p><div style="text-align:center;"><p><strong>Overall Rating: A</strong></p></div><p></p>

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<blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="DatIsraeliGuy" data-cite="DatIsraeliGuy" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41343" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>I can't believe you wasted Rocky vs. Wolf on Just Another Day</div></blockquote><p> </p><p> It’s not the only time they’ll face off, trust me. <img alt=":)" data-src="//content.invisioncic.com/g322608/emoticons/smile.png.142cfa0a1cd2925c0463c1d00f499df2.png" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></p>
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Really living up to the PPV name, aren't you? :p

 

Haha! Oh wow, now I want Just Another Day 2017 to be all part 6s and above of feuds.

 

TCW Where Angels Fear To Tread

 

Troy Tornado beat Valiant (B) - Troy Tornado, fed up with struggling to get on PPV cards, laid down a challenge to Rocky Golden - the champion could name his opponent every week for two months, as long as Troy got a title shot if he won all of his matches! Rocky accepted, and Troy went on a great run, beating Edd Stone, Guide, Bryan Vessey, and Joshua Taylor. However at the final Total Wrestling before the PPV Rocky introduced his next opponent - the debuting Valiant! Many thought this would be a step too far for Troy, but the wily veteran pulled off something of a shock victory - admittedly helped by a handful of tights.

 

Bruce the Giant beat Edd Stone (C+) - With Marat Khoklov leaving TCW after two shocking losses to Sammy Bach and Edd Stone (curse you BHOTWG!) he was replaced as Goldworthy's enforcer by Bruce the Giant, tempted out of retirement for a brief run. Bruce attacked Bach last week to debut, putting him through a table with a massive chokeslam which would rule him out of the PPV, then challenged Edd. This was a fairly easy victory for Bruce - mainly to hide the fact that he can't move too well anymore, even compared to his less than mobile prime - followed by Floyd challenging Sammy for Total Mayhem. Bach, despite clearly not being fully fit, limped out to accept!

 

Mighty Mo beat Marc Speed to win the International title. (B) - Mo picked up a victory over Speed a few weeks earlier during the Saturday Night Showcase series. While that match was non-title, the win propelled him to the top of the line for a shot at the International belt here, and he repeated his feat, much to the fan's delight. Unfortunately for Speed here, his technical excelllence couldn't get past the brute force of the big man.

 

Eddie Peak beat Giant Tana (B) - Speaking of big men and brute force, Eddie Peak has looked more dangerous than ever since Blonde Bombshell returned. After a ten year absence, the beauty is showing a whole new attitude and Peak looks smitten. She's even smoothed over the issues between him and Floyd Goldworthy. Peak and Bryan Vessey - Goldworthy's newest charge, having hooked up with the manager after something of a losing streak - beat Tana and Mo last week, with Peak adding insult to injury with a post-match beatdown. Tana challenged him to a one-on-one match here and Peak was happy to accept, although the brutality of this one may have left the big Samoan wishing he hadn't been so rash.

 

Bryan Vessey and the Elite beat Flying Jimmy Foxx and the New Machines (B-) - This was pretty much a thrown together six-man but plenty of action left the fans feeling pleased with it anyway. Human Arsenal's newest tag partner, Jeremie Courtney, did a decent job of keeping up with the vastly experienced guys in the ring with him - Flying Jimmy Foxx, the next closest thing to a rookie, had been wrestling for 18 years, six times as long as JC! Courtney ate the loss, though, tapping out to a Vessey figure four.

 

New Wave beat Behemoths to retain the tag titles (B-) - Former champs the Behemoths went on a great run to get the title shot here, with 7 wins in a row since losing the belt. In the end, though, the fluidity of the veterans was too much for them to overcome, Guide and Scout managing to take Shark to the outside with a double clothesline over the ropes before joining their power together to lift Titan with a massive double suplex and get the victory.

 

Wolf Hawkins beat Joshua Taylor (B+) - This pair collided in tag action twice this month, Hawkins and Freddy Huggins beating Taylor and Dave Diamond via brass knuckles to Taylor's head from Wolf to get some serious bad blood going between the pair. Hawkins would then bring in five guys from TCW Young Guns (our development fed) and let Taylor pick both of their partners for a tag match. Taylor picked Riley McManus for himself and Quentin Queen for Hawkins, saying that The Q Man and Wolf were both too arrogant to coexist together. This proved to be the case, Queen dominating McManus but not tagging Hawkins in, and falling victim to Taylor's greater experience after a hot tag. That led to Hawkins attacking Queen, with Taylor saving. Tensions were high running into this one but both men managed to mix hard strikes with superb technical moves. In the end, Hawkins proved too good, trapping Josh in a Boston Crab for the submission victory.

 

Rocky Golden beat Jay Chord to retain the World title (A) - Chord said when the Saturday Night Showcase series started that he was going to win it and use his title shot to get the World belt at Where Angels Fear To Tread, so that he'd enter Total Mayhem as the champion. Despite the efforts of Marc Speed, Mighty Mo, and Elliot Thomas to stop him, he completed the first part of his boast, then continued his excellent form with big victories over Guide and Human Arsenal in the two weeks before the PPV. This was a classic bout and Golden looked in serious trouble more than once, much to the shock of the crowd. Chord even hit his patented Cradle Piledriver and made the cover for 2 and nineteen twentieths, only for Golden to kick out of the move - the first person ever to do so in TCW. As a furious Chord screamed at the referee for counting too slowly, Rocky took out his knee with a chop block to gain control, and eventually hit the Rocky Road for the win.

 

Overall rating: A

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