ROH 385 – Aftershock Tour: Hopkins – 11th July 2015

Last year ‘Aftershock’ was merely a stop-off on the ‘Summer Heat Tour’ (coincidentally also in Hopkins), but this year the entire post-BITW tour has been rebranded. And amazingly, there’s even a hole in AJ Styles’ schedule meaning that he has made it for a rare appearance in one of ROH’s smaller markets. He is in the main event tonight; a triple threat match also featuring Kyle O’Reilly and the #1 contender for the World Title, Roderick Strong. Beneath that the stand-out matches appear to be Adam Cole squaring off with reDRagon’s Bobby Fish, Dalton Castle versus ACH and a unique mixed tag match pitting former World Champion Jay Briscoe and ODB against the new champ Jay Lethal and his manager Truth Martini. As ever with ROH house shows under Sinclair, brace yourself for a potentially patchy undercard (tonight including the loathsome Beer City Bruiser again) – but hopefully something pops out and makes this DVD/VOD worth checking out. As the title implies, we’re in Hopkins, MN and we appear to have Kevin Kelly providing canned, post-production commentary on his own (which is usually a recipe for disaster).

SIDENOTE – The bonus features include AR freaking Fox in a dark match from the recent New York TV tapings. What the hell? How is AR Fox only good enough for a random dark match? Ridiculous!

Danny Duggan vs Mark Briscoe
I believe Duggan appeared during the Conquest Tour, and to reiterate he’s not the same Danny Duggan from British tag team ‘DND’. I don’t recall anything too memorable from him last time out, but I presume he paid cash, attended a training seminar and has duly purchased a spot on the card because he won’t embarrass himself whilst Mark Briscoe does all his usual spots. ROH house shows really can be tough to sit through these days…

‘He’s got four kids and a cranky wife at home’ – Kevin Kelly rebranding Mark Briscoe as the new Carnage Crew. As you’d expect, Mark is far more jovial than the old Carnage Crew (or the ‘New & Improved Carnage Crew’ too for that matter) and utilises plenty of his unorthodox strikes and poses to unsettle Duggan. He rattles off a couple of stiff clotheslines driving Danny to the outside…so he gives chase and suplexes him on the floor. Apparently Hopkins isn’t big enough to even get the Cactus Elbow – sorry B-show fans. Instead Briscoe hauls Duggan back inside and gets a close nearfall with a Russian legsweep. A pissed off Duggan finally pulls Mark off the top rope BY THE BEARD to mount his first serious offence of the match. They exchange chops, and refreshingly Mark actually switches up his usual Redneck Kung Fu for some believably stiff strikes…albeit his only reward is getting a dropkick to the face. Crane Kick blocked, so Duggan gets a gamengiri instead. Perfect-plex gets 2 for Duggan – who is so irritated by it that THE STRAPS COME DOWN! Inevitably that leads to nothing, and as he walks out of the ring again Briscoe takes flight with a blockbuster OFF THE APRON! Uncle Mule Kick, into the fisherman buster – and Briscoe gets the win at 09:52

Rating - ** - I’ll admit that my play-by-play and intro were both rather cynical. It isn’t the fault of either one of these guys that I watch every show and therefore I’ve seen this routine on every single ROH house show for the last two years. ROH is entirely built around their TV show now, and events like this are of such little importance that actually, as far as Sinclair executives go, this was just dandy. Mark hit enough of his crowd pleasing offence to entertain the live fans (and probably went above and beyond with that blockbuster to the floor), and Duggan was exactly the sort of solid, well-built, non-flashy enhancement talent they like to pick up (whilst AR Fox is only good enough for dark matches obviously). This did nothing for me, but in and of itself it was a functional opening bout, and it would be harsh not to rate it accordingly.

Silas Young/Beer City Bruiser vs War Machine
If I haven’t made it clear in previous reviews, I really dislike Beer City Bruiser. Apparently he is quite a ‘real man’ though if Silas Young (who I do like) is willing to team up with him. This should be quite a titanic struggle too, since the two men across the ring from them are big sluggers themselves. Rowe and Hanson are reunited and on the hunt for tag team gold in Ring Of Honor. It would be a major dent to their championship aspirations if they were to lose to a first-time team here.

War Machine have matching gear now (i.e. matching ‘leather skirts’ as Young puts it). Young also calls them hipsters which made me laugh loud enough to wake my sleeping daughter. He tries to wrestle with Rowe and gets taken to school by the former collegiate amateur. Bruiser gets a tag and is very obviously entirely out of breath after a simple exchange of shoulder tackles with Hanson. War Beard then socks Young from behind with a lariat for good measure. BCB hits Rowe with an exploder suplex, enabling he and his partner to isolate the smaller member of War Machine. CEMENT MIXER ON THE BRUISER! That’s what you get for being so out of shape you can’t even run across the ring you big goof! Hanson batters him with the cartwheel lariat then smacks him about in the corner – which works out well for him as he gets to lie around and catch his breath. Young blocks the Bronco Buster…so gets REPEATED FACEWASHES! DOUBLE BRONCO BUSTER! Bruiser hauls Rowe out of the ring for a FATTY CANNONBALL, then joins Young inside the ring for a double team Killer Combo. Amusingly BCB essentially collapses in his corner after that because he’s so gassed. Rebound lariat by Silas to counter the Spin Kick Of Doom! DDT INTO THE BOTTOM TURNBUCKLE on Rowe! BIG FAT FROG SPLASH by Beer City! FOR 2! DEATH ROWE ON SILAS! SPIN KICK OF DOOM! FALLOUT ON BCB! War Machine win at 10:44

Rating - *** - Despite the presence of Beer City Bruiser, this match was really enjoyable. Young as the surly veteran is so fun to watch, and he was on fire here actively trying to fight War Machine by himself because he’s so grumpy he doesn’t even want the sizeable help that Bruiser offers. Hanson and Rowe are really starting to click again after Ray Rowe’s injury too. They are an amazing sight stringing together massive tandem strikes and hammer blows when they get some momentum going – and are quite unlike anything else in the ROH tag division. If Delirious can manage them properly they could be real draws for the company. A tag team environment made it far easier for Bruiser to hit one move then spend a couple of minutes catching his breath, to which he is far more suited.

Dalton Castle vs ACH
These two could steal the show if given enough time and leeway to do so. They are two of the more vibrant and zany characters in the roster right now, and should make extremely natural opponents. Castle allies unorthodox mannerisms and his unusual persona with a fearsome mat wrestling game and surprising feats of strength. ACH meanwhile is loud, cocky and unpredictable – and probably the most explosive and athletic performer Ring Of Honor has. Having just seen his new rival Silas Young taste defeat Castle would love to get another one-up on him by leaving Hopkins with his arm raised.

ACH is thrown completely off his game by Castle and spends the opening minutes with his face etched in a permanently confused expression as the Party Peacock preens and struts. Finally he succeeds in quickening the pace as he needs to do – and instantly knocks his opponent out of the ring with a dropkick. Castle wisely slows it right back down and grapples ACH back to the canvas where he can dictate proceedings. Castognoli-style Karelin lift gutwrench suplex drives ACH to the outside this time. HEAT SEEKING MISSILE NAILED! Castle can fly too! ACH blocks the apron-619 headscissors though and counters it with a leaping kick to the back of the head. FLAGPOLE HEADSCISSORS puts Dalton on the ground once again! ACH takes it back inside the ring and shows some noticeable strategy, apparently targeting the midsection to set up for the ‘Midnight Star’ (his 450 Splash – is that name racist by the way?). He then climbs onto Castle’s back, mounting him with a chinlock to crush as much air from his lungs as possible. A spinning heel kick to the ribs knocks Dalton to the floor again, only for ACH to get too cocky and sleepwalk into the apron-619 rana second time around. Superkick to the ribs…before the Big Bang Attack is countered with a northern lights suplex by the tiring Castle. ACH counters right back by escaping the Everest German into a straight kick to the head. Springboard elbow CAUGHT by Dalton – into an overhead throw. EVEREST GERMAN! FOR 2! Did ACH’s targeting of the midsection weaken the effectiveness of that hold? He topples Dalton once again then piles into the ribs once more with the RUNNING MOONSAULT TO THE FLOOR! MIDNIGHT STAR NAILED! ACH wins at 15:33

Rating - **** - It’s been quite a while since I reviewed an ROH live event, but this surely has to be one of Castle’s best Ring Of Honor matches thus far? They were given a generous time allowance, and they used it to have a far more interesting match than I’d expected. Instead of hitting their trademark spots, popping the crowd with some token sexually ambiguous Castle shenanigans then going home they actually contested an intense and completely believable contest. ACH was flummoxed by Dalton’s posturing, so tried to quicken the pace…instantly prompting Castle to look to ground him with his formidable mat wrestling skills. ACH needed one big aerial spot (the flagpole headscissors) to burst back into the contest, and when he did so he broke out a new strategy – simultaneously weakening Dalton for his own finishing moves and weakening the execution of his too. I really enjoyed ACH working a body part as well. He tried a sloppy, ugly abdominal stretch, and quickly realised that wasn’t his style. So instead he peppered the midsection with strikes, slams and dives all of which honed in on that area instead. It worked – he was able to survive the Everest German where Dalton wasn’t able to kick out of the 450 Splash.

Matt Taven vs Michael Elgin
On television this week we saw Elgin clash with The Kingdom – putting in an impressive performance as he and reDRagon scored a surprise victory over Cole, Bennett and his opponent tonight Matt Taven. Elgin is back to being a guy we’re supposed to like it seems, with Kevin Kelly portraying it as a ‘change in attitude’…which in some kayfabe sense could be explained by getting to live out his lifelong dream of touring Japan, since NJPW had just announced him as a 2015 G1 Climax participant. He’ll look to prepare for the G1 later this month with a victory over Taven, who himself has already made a splash in New Japan in 2015 by winning the IWGP Heavyweight Tag Titles from the Bullet Club (albeit Anderson and Gallows won them back the weekend before this show).

Apparently these two have beef on Twitter – if so why not let them cut some backstage promo’s? It’s not like this DVD will run long. Taven cheapshots Elgin, who was offering a clean handshake since apparently being a babyface again means he has to go back to making basic moronic decisions like that. It also means me plays to the crowd again whilst hoisting Matt up for the ultra-delayed vertical suplex. Taven fails with a tope suicida, but when Elgin catches him he reacts quickly to shove him face-first into the ringpost. To his credit he then shows impressive skill to hit an effortless Blue Thunder Driver on the big man. He follows that up with a rolling neckbreaker too, before conveniently working a rest hold so Kevin Kelly can waffle on about New Japan some more. His commentary is also massively out of sync with the action so he is calling spots before they happen…as if he needs technology to make him even f*cking worse. Big Mike counters an attempted frankensteiner then lunges into the flying Codebreaker for 2. He appeared to tweak his knee in executing that, but still levels Taven with the Ripcord Elbow. The Kingdom representative hits back with a springboard enzi only to take way too long climbing the ropes for the frog splash. Sunset flip bomb instead…before Elgin gets his knees up to block the Frog Splash. Buckle Bomb countered with a rana…then a tope suicida! Five Star Frog Splash finally nailed – for just two. ‘USA’ – Hopkins fans delivering their verdict on Elgin’s face turn. This match feels like it’s been going on forever. HANGING CLIMAX by Taven (by far the coolest thing we’ve seen thus far) but Elgin lands too close to the ropes. He pops up as if nothing has happened, dodges a couple of Taven flips then polishes him off with the Elgin Bomb at 15:02.

Rating - DUD - As a package this match was NOT good in any way. Firstly, I really don’t understand how a broadcasting company (SBG) would allow this match to be released with Kevin Kelly’s audio so wildly out of sync. I get that this is a low profile B-show, but surely sheer pride in your work would make you do something about it? It’s not like the match itself was amazing, but having every spot called out a full five or six seconds before they take place by Kevin Kelly’s nerdy little voice completely killed it. Inside the ring, this was fifteen minutes of moves…with absolutely NOTHING holding it together. Neither of these guys are great psychologists with their matches, and tend to have their better efforts when someone else is with them to string their bullsh*t together. Here they just lumbered around hitting spots, then looking vacantly into the crowd wondering why you could hear crickets chirping. Matt Taven had clearly been watching his RVD tapes – as he basically stopped pose and admire himself after EVERY…SINGLE…MOVE. Even Van Dam wasn’t cool enough to pull that sh*t off too often. Elgin had a knee injury for a while, except when he needed to hit all his SUPER AWESOME moves of course. Then it was fine. Or when he needed to sell to make Taven look good – it was fine then as well. Awful match…

Elgin grabs the microphone (and gets some horrific abuse from a few vocal fans) to deliver an apology for his attitude and to proclaim that he loves pro-wrestling and Ring Of Honor. He waffles on about New Japan some more, then wants to be ROH Champion again when he returns. He gets a weak little ‘ROH’ chant going, then Kelly introduces a commercial…FOR MORE F*CKING NEW JAPAN GUYS!

SIDENOTE – ROH clearly expects it’s audience not to give a stuff about these little house shows. All night Kevin Kelly has rambled on about New Japan. Every wrestler wants to go to New Japan, or has been to New Japan…or has more important things going on in New Japan than they do in ROH. And when there isn’t an NJPW regular involved we simply get shills for NEW JAPAN GUYS COMING TO THE US again instead. I understand ROH are the small fish in the relationship – but they aren’t their developmental territory. Why can’t we at least try to keep up the illusion that anything happening at this ROH show retains even a little significance?

Michael Bennett vs Will Ferrara vs Cheeseburger vs Moose
Whom to route for amongst this bunch? Moose has to evaluate the direction of his career after two consecutive defeats and one half of his management team (Veda Scott) ditching him to manage Cedric Alexander instead. Bennett, like Taven, is recovering from losing the IWGP Tag Titles to the Bullet Club in NEW JAPAN last week (now even I’m f*cking doing it) – although you wouldn’t know it from his jovial, pizza-eating ring entrance. Ferrara and Cheeseburger will presumably do their usual stuff, and I’ll continue to utterly despise CB and barely tolerate Will.

Bennett dramatically opts not to start with Moose, so both abandon the ring to let Cheeseburger and Ferrara show off how good the wristlocks they learned at the ROH Dojo this week are. Burger tries to work Delirious’ Cobra Stretch, but is so little even Will can simply get up and escape it. The big men briefly step inside the ring…but Mike still wants no part of Moose so runs off and leaves Cheese to deal with the former NFL athlete. Moose having to sell ANYTHING that Cheeseburger does is embarrassingly fake – and thankfully ends when he crushes a satellite headscissors attempt with a side slam. Bennett now forces his way in to bully the hapless little Burger…but is soon way too cocky and does find himself on the receiving end of some Moose punishment. Moose knocks Bennett off the top rope with a standing dropkick which is seriously impressive. He immediately loses all credibility by having to sell a DDT from Ferrara though. Cheeseburger runs in with the Shotei on Will! SUPERKICK on Cheesburger by Bennett, followed by the Box Office Smash. He sets up the piledriver, but turns into the ROLLING SPEAR (now christened the ‘Hitstick’) from Moose. Ferrara dodges the Game Changer by hitting a tope suicida to the outside. Even more comically, Bennett does the exact same thing seconds later to nail a somersault plancha. Maria gets involved to distract Moose, as inside the ring Bennett finishes Cheeseburger off with the Jumping Piledriver at 11:36

Rating - ** - It won’t live long in the memory, but I found this an enjoyable little post-intermission popcorn bout that packed in some genuinely funny comedic moments, some decent action, a few bits of actual smart wrestling and one of Moose’s best ever performances in an ROH ring. We are used to seeing him hidden on the apron during these four corner matches, protected by ‘better workers’ before lumbering in to hit his big crowd-pleasing spots at the end. But here he looked more comfortable and actually acted as the focal point for the whole match.

Adam Cole vs Bobby Fish
Expect to see a little more of reDRagon’s two representatives in singles action moving forward, now that their reign as Tag Champions has concluded. O’Reilly has a massive opportunity in the main event of this show, and his partner has a prominent spot as well – in a featured uppercard singles match with a former World Champion. Cole has had his problems with his team-mates in The Kingdom recently, and lost a couple of matches as a result (including a 6-man tag which included Fish amongst the opposition). He remains a tough adversary, and one with far more big time singles match experience in ROH than Bobby possesses.

These two have largely been heels for a long time, so both seem a little taken aback as they get loud duelling chants of both their names throughout the opening minute. Adam is keen to maintain some distance, fearful of Fish’s striking and grappling skills. At the five minute mark he walks right into a vicious kick – delivered with such force that it drives him out of the ring. As he recovers on the floor Fish sneaks up behind him to tackle him INTO THE RAILING! With the former World Champion now vulnerable Fish looks to start picking him apart on the mat. Cole’s back and legs take some abuse, so he leaves the ring and lures Bobby into inadvertently kicking the ringpost. It’s an intelligent move, and one which both opens up an obvious weakness and also robs Fish of his kicks (one of his most potent weapons). Fish lays in a kick, but it has no effect and Cole runs right through it into the Shining Wizard for 2. Exposed Knee Wizard ducked though…into a hobbling Samoan drop. Fish hits a turnbuckle exploder (apparently called the ‘Fishbone Suplex’??) which does more damage to Cole’s leg and back but has a hard time getting to his feet after executing it. He somehow hits a jumping knee then the falcon arrow only for his face to fall in utter to despair when Cole gets his feet in the ropes. Again Adam targets the knee, this time to block the top rope falcon arrow, but doesn’t have enough left in his own leg to hit the Panama Sunrise. Fish COUNTERS to a heel hook…and yet again Cole makes the ropes. EXPOSED KNEE WIZARD gets 2 for Cole – who himself can barely stand now. FLORIDA KEY…TWO AGAIN! Cole’s injuries clearly impacted his ability to maintain the bridge, and Fish drags him into the Fish Hook Deluxe. COUNTERED TO THE FIGURE 4! FISH HOLDS ONTO THE HEEL HOOK TOO! Both men collapse to the ropes crying out in pain. SUPERKICK TO THE BAD LEG by Cole! SUPERKICK AGAIN! LAST SHOT! Cole wins at 19:31

Rating - **** - This was right up my street, and kudos to Delirious for giving these guys plenty of time to deliver a tremendous straight-laced and hard-fought pro-wrestling match. The extra five minutes here gave them a little more space to let their story breathe. Cole, more of a traditional ‘wrestler’ struggled to match the technical skills and strikes of his rival early on, so lured him into making an error by kicking the ringpost. With Fish then critically weakened, he was able to go to work and open up a major advantage by working the now-damaged leg. Although Bobby managed to hit some of his biggest guns, he never overcame the leg injury Cole inflicted and despite a valiant effort succumbed to defeat. Cole has been having ridiculously good matches since returning from injury at War Of The Worlds, and even whilst not in the World Title picture it’s hard not to get the impression that he is ROH’s biggest contracted singles ‘star’ right now.

For the second time in a week Adam Cole respectfully shakes hands with a member of reDRagon, as both receive a standing ovation.

Jay Lethal/Truth Martini vs Jay Briscoe/ODB
Lethal won the battle at Best In The World –  ending Jay Briscoe’s lengthy undefeated streak and becoming both World and Television Champion in the process. But Briscoe will certainly be looking for a rematch somewhere down the line – and in the meantime will look to vent some frustration with both Lethal and his antagonistic annoyance of a manager alongside him. Truth has also made a spectacle of ODB at times too so this will have plenty of intensity to it. Briscoe will be keenly aware that a non-title victory over Jay Lethal would almost immediately grant him a title rematch.

The House Of Truth try to jump their opponents, but are comprehensively dismissed by the rampant Briscoe/ODB duo. Martini seems intent in wrestling in his sunglasses which is a nice touch, and pauses to adjust them as he watches Lethal violently toss ODB into the guardrails. Normality is restored inside the ring, with Truth dodging the Briscoe double football tackle from his two opponents – and instead leaving Lethal to take the spot instead. STALLING SUPLEX ON LETHAL BY ODB! Jay counters it by raking the eyes though before smashing her to the mat with a running lariat. The HOT start isolating ODB through fair means or foul. The tough woman tries to mount a comeback by making out with Jay Lethal (you read that right), then trades shots with both opponents before making a hot tag. Lethal Injection countered with a big boot…into the Rude Awakening for 2. Doomsday Device blocked…only for Lethal to inadvertently superkick Martini! BAM on Lethal gets 2 for ODB! Jay Driller blocked…TOPE SUICIDA INTO THE GUARDRAILS by Briscoe! In the ring ODB spits whisky into Truth’s face then rolls him up for a popular victory at 12:38

Rating - *** - This had the potential to get messy, but actually I found it moderately entertaining, and a nice way to separate the Cole/Fish match from the main event to keep the crowd lively. They sensibly didn’t let this stray too far into the realms of comedy, which I don’t think would have worked given the intensity of the very recent Briscoe/Lethal feud, and instead worked a relatively straight-forward formula tag. The entertainment value came from ODB delivering her best ROH showing by a MILE and looking totally credible in the ring with either of her male opponents. Watching her hit power spots on Lethal then bully Martini was certainly a spectacle and something you certainly don’t see on many ROH events. The exchanges between the current and former World Champions were suitably aggressive too. This wasn’t ever going to be an MOTYC but they found a lively and enjoyable way to kill ten minutes or so.

Kyle O’Reilly vs Roderick Strong vs AJ Styles
No championships are on the line, but this still has quite the big match feel – largely due to a rare ROH house-show appearance for AJ. His status in New Japan  would ordinarily make him the man to beat, but he is just a week removed from losing the IWGP Heavyweight Title back to Kazuchika Okada and for once won’t have the target on his back here. That honour goes to Strong, who is now the #1 contender for the Ring Of Honor World Championship. Both O’Reilly and Styles will know that a win here would put them at the front of the queue for a title shot should Roddy take the belt from Lethal at Death Before Dishonor. For O’Reilly, this also represents a huge opportunity to prove himself in a singles environment – having excelled as a tag team performer for so long. Can he prove he belongs with one of the best in ROH (Strong) and one of the very best on the planet (AJ)?

Styles’ entrance takes twice as long as his opponents’ as he needs to circle the ring to ‘2 Sweet’ basically every fan in the first two rows, then gets drowned in streamers as he enters the ring. He initiates first contact as all three chaotically throw strikes…then at the whim of a single fan work a three-way headlock spot. O’Reilly’s combo strikes take AJ down and he actually starts working both opponents’ arms simultaneously. Arm-ageddon on AJ…and an Anklelock on Strong too! Roderick kicks free of that to plant Kyle into the mat with a back suplex. Kevin Kelly’s audio is way out of sync again which is irritating, and he calls Strong’s Olympic Slam on Styles five+ seconds before it actually occurs. MutaLock in response from AJ, into the Calf Killer! ARM-AGEDDON by Kyle to break that! STRONGHOLD/ARM-AGEDDON COMBO ON STYLES! Until Kyle releases his submission on Styles and puts Strong in a hanging sleeper instead. Phenomenal Forearm on Roddy! O’Reilly blocks Bloody Sunday…then AJ blocks Strong’s cradle backbreaker. MUSO INSTEAD! Chop/kick duel between Roddy and Kyle, until O’Reilly can take no more and puts him in a hanging armbar. Styles Clash on the floor…BLOCKED with a flying knee off the apron by O’Reilly. Phenomenal Blitz floors Roddy again but before AJ can capitalise he has his arm snared in a Fujiwara armbar by O’Reilly. Styles responds by suplexing Strong straight into the reDRagon member. Roddy frantically battles the Styles Clash, feeding him into Axe & Smash. JAWBREAKER LARIAT ON STRONG! PELE KICK ON O’REILLY! BLOODY SUNDAY! FOR 2! SICK KICK…still 2! Death By Roderick COUNTERED to the hanging sleeper! COUNTERED TO END OF HEARTACHE! Strong wins at 14:40!

Rating - **** - This was hardly groundbreaking and probably only just snuck into 4* territory, but the live audience loved it…and it really was difficult not to enjoy three men of this calibre riffing off each other and reeling off high octane spot flurries for fun. I’m always the first to criticise triple threat matches for following a rather predictable formula, but it was actually impressive how many three-way spots these guys managed to work in. It wasn’t in the league of the likes of Ki/Danielson/Daniels, or Styles/Daniels/Joe or any other truly ‘great’ triple threat you care to mention – but it sent the crowd home happy and culminated in a huge victory for a guy needing plenty of momentum and main event credibility going into ROH’s next iPPV offering.

Tape Rating - *** - If you can look past audio issues, Kevin Kelly’s nerdy solo commentary and endless New Japan shilling this was actually a really strong house show for ROH and arguably their best Hopkins show. There was a big fat stinker from Elgin and Taven in the middle too, but for the most part the in-ring product was really strong. Cole/Fish was outstanding, Dalton Castle produced his best ROH match yet, the main event had packed in plenty of thrills and spills…and even Beer City Bruiser found his way into a really decent match. In an era where Ring Of Honor house shows can be completely skippable – you could be forgiven for not giving this card a second glance. However, this one is well worth the discounted VOD price…

Top 3 Matches
3) Roderick Strong vs Kyle O’Reilly vs AJ Styles (****)
2) ACH vs Dalton Castle (****)
1) Adam Cole vs Bobby Fish (****)

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