Post by Admin on May 21, 2019 16:28:21 GMT
Day 3 of the Tag Wars event was the most attended of the bunch. Fans were clamoring about the main event and the eventual crowning of the first tag team champions within the North American Wrestling Council. A highlight package of each team’s ascent to the finals was shown, before the night kicked off.
In the ring to begin things was Sato Watanabe from Northern Pro Wrestling. The Japanese Ace has been spending his time being an ambassador for two of the top young talents from the land of the rising son. Watanabe stood menacingly in the middle of the ring, and was flanked by Tetsu Kondo and Kano Ito.
Watanabe: “I can assure you that going forward, we will be a fixture on events like these. Once we begin to lay tag teams by the wayside, the NAWC committee will have no choice but to engage us. We will be keeping a close eye on the matches tonight.”
Ito was dressed in Shinobi like garb, revealing only his eyes – as they darted from side to side. Kondo looked like he had just ran a mile, and completed 200 hindu squats. He rubbed his hands together with purpose.
- -
Tag Team Showcase
20 Minute Time Limit
Bloodline [Edgar Delgado & Manuel Mayorga] (MPW) Combined Weight: 442lbs
vs.
Spin Cycle [Jamal Williams and Reggie Taylor] (MPW) Combined Weight: 430lbs
-
The team of Jamal Williams and Reggie Taylor have had their run-ins with Manuel Mayorga over the past couple of months in Midwestern Pro wrestling. In most cases, Santiago Ortega was part of the equation. On this occasion, they would be dealing with the leader of Bloodline – Edgar Delgado, and Manuel Mayorga in a two on two tag team contest to hopefully settle some of their differences.
Delgado and Mayorga walked the aisle with purpose. As they approached the ring, it appeared as though Williams and Taylor thought their best approach would be to get an early start. The duo ran the ropes and looked to execute twin suicide dives. The only problem with that was that Bloodline was ready for it. Williams dove headfirst into a running Yakuza Kick from Delgado. Meanwhile Reggie Taylor mistimed his leap, and Mayorga easily side stepped his attempt – sending Taylor to the concrete floor.
Mayorga and Delgado smiled at one and other, and started to turn up the violence. Mayorga picked Taylor up off the floor and held his limp body in place for Delgado who pushed forward and turned him inside out with a vicious clothesline. Mayorga grabbed Williams and repeatedly slammed his head into the arena guardrail. It didn’t take long before a cut would form on the forehead of Williams, and blood was spew all over his own face and chest. Mayorga finished Williams off with a vicious superkick that sent him falling into the front row.
Meanwhile Edgar Delgado had thrown Reggie Taylor into the ring. Delgado looked at the referee and asked him to ‘ring the bell.’ The referee complied, and the match was officially underway. Delgado planted Taylor with a running power slam – before climbing to the top rope and executing a perfect moonsault that had the crowd in awe. Delgado landed firmly, and right into the pinfall situation. The referee made the three count.
Result: Bloodline defeats Spin Cycle via Moonsault [:26]
Post match, Edgar Delgado got on the mic and addressed the Midwestern Pro audience.
Delgado: “That was amateur. Attacking us before the bell was the worst strategy possible and we showed that.”
Mayorga gets a few more licks in on the fallen Reggie Taylor, before standing side by side with Delgado.
Delgado: “Shane Severe… Mitchell Dixon…”
The crowd cheers at hearing the names of two of their heroes being called out.
Delgado: “We haven’t forgotten about what happened a couple of weeks ago. We will be seeing you both very soon.”
Delgado drops the mic, before nodding to Mayorga. The two men absolutely decimated an up and coming tag team, and have gone out of their way to call out another duo with whom they’ve had differences with in recent weeks. Multiply that with their actions in A*P, and we can deduce that Bloodline is a force to be reckoned with as we head into the second half of 2019.
- -
Main Event
NAWC Tag Team Championship Final
60 Minute Time Limit
Manos Del Muerte [Death Adder and Hidealgo 19] (A*P)
vs.
The World Beaters [Jason Brown and Dave Thompson] (CJW)
As time came for the main event, Jon Smith walked down to ringside with the North American Tag Team Championship belts. He placed them on the time keepers table, and sat down at ringside to watch the match itself take place. The World Beaters were out first, and appeared to be all business. They didn’t acknowledge the fans, and walked by a few out stretched hands on their way to the ring. Thompson and Brown went right to the far corner of the ring and watched as their opponents entered the fray.
Hidealgo 19 and Death Adder made their way to the ring, poised to inflict punishment. On most occasions you’ll see upwards of five members of the Manos Del Muerte group together at the same time. El Gran Barbararo must believe that his stable has things under control without his presence.
As the match got underway, it was clear that the fans weren’t sure who to align with. What they hoped for was a showing of tag team excellence. Early on, Hidealgo 19 and Dave Thompson were battling inside the ring, outside of the ring, and showing no ‘backdown’. Thompson would eventually use his size advantage to shift the balance of power over to his team. The World beaters would showcase strong tag team chemistry, as if each man was reading from the same script at all times. Hand signals and eye brow raises were all of the communication needed, as each man seemed to fit effortlessly into their role.
After some double teaming and a couple of near falls – we could Death Adder growing more and more impatient on the sidelines. Adder would try to intimidate the referee into breaking up some of the double team moves being used by his opponents – but to no avail. Hidealgo 19 would eventually slip away from Jason Brown, and make a blind tag to Death Adder, who would blindside Brown with a flying forearm smash from behind. Many vicious stomps would follow, before Brown was shipped off into the ropes and smashed down with a nasty spinebuster.
As Adder and Hidealgo ceased control, they started to build their confidence rather quickly. The duo showed a great deal of strategy and high level thinking when it came to their methods of attack. They would take turns twisting Browns body into positions that he never thought possible – while really synching in their ‘wear down holds’ and took liberties with the amount of leverage being used. It was as if these two men had studied the art of torture, and were applying it with ease in this contest. It was a masterful display – as Adder would smirk as he stretched Brown every which way possible.
The fans started to feel sympathetic, and did do their best to send motivation Brown’s way. Their support seemed to come from the fact that Brown appeared to have ‘had enough’, and that they could see Adder and Hidealgo 19 enjoying their work a little too much.
A break in the match would come for the World Beaters when Brown was able to smack Adder with an enzuguri, and his momentum carried him close enough to his corner to where the long arm of Dave Thompson could secure a ‘hot tag’.
The crowd excitedly cheered for Thompson, who was looking to avenge the beating his tag team partner had endured for the better part of ten minutes. Thompson’s comeback would be short lived, as Death Adder was able to blister him with a front kick to the gut, followed by a DDT. The cover was made, but Jason Brown was able to jump into the ring and make the save before the referee could count to three.
All four men were in the ring, and paired off. Death Adder and Thompson were the legal men. It appeared as though the Manos Del Muerte team was gaining an advantage once again –until Hidealgo 19 was irish whipped into the back of Death Adder and the two collided heads. Hidealgo 19 seemed to get the worst of it, as Death Adder turned around quickly with his right hand cocked to throw a punch. Once Adder realized that it was his tag team partner that hit him, he looked down at the mat confused. In that split second, Jason Brown caught Death Adder with a drop kick that staggered him backwards, into a school boy roll up from Dave Thompson. Thompson grabbed a hand full of tights, to which the referee didn’t see. The referee’s hands hit the mat three times, and The World Beaters had stolen a victory away from Manos Del Muerte, in what would have to be considered – a MAJOR Upset.
As The World Beaters rolled out of the ring to celebrate on the arena floor. We could see Death Adder and Hidealgo 19 going over the final moments of the match – and both men could be seen blaming the other for their misfortunes.
Result: The World Beaters defeat Manos Del Muerte via School Boy rollup [29:12] to become the North American Tag Team Champions
—
Jon Smith handed over the North American Tag team chanpkonship to the duo who wrestle out of the United Kingdom. Jon shook both of their hands, before exiting the camera shot. The new champions embraced, before walking up the ramp. They turned around to see Hidealgo 19 and Death Adder still hashing out their differences.
In the ring to begin things was Sato Watanabe from Northern Pro Wrestling. The Japanese Ace has been spending his time being an ambassador for two of the top young talents from the land of the rising son. Watanabe stood menacingly in the middle of the ring, and was flanked by Tetsu Kondo and Kano Ito.
Watanabe: “I can assure you that going forward, we will be a fixture on events like these. Once we begin to lay tag teams by the wayside, the NAWC committee will have no choice but to engage us. We will be keeping a close eye on the matches tonight.”
Ito was dressed in Shinobi like garb, revealing only his eyes – as they darted from side to side. Kondo looked like he had just ran a mile, and completed 200 hindu squats. He rubbed his hands together with purpose.
- -
Tag Team Showcase
20 Minute Time Limit
Bloodline [Edgar Delgado & Manuel Mayorga] (MPW) Combined Weight: 442lbs
vs.
Spin Cycle [Jamal Williams and Reggie Taylor] (MPW) Combined Weight: 430lbs
-
The team of Jamal Williams and Reggie Taylor have had their run-ins with Manuel Mayorga over the past couple of months in Midwestern Pro wrestling. In most cases, Santiago Ortega was part of the equation. On this occasion, they would be dealing with the leader of Bloodline – Edgar Delgado, and Manuel Mayorga in a two on two tag team contest to hopefully settle some of their differences.
Delgado and Mayorga walked the aisle with purpose. As they approached the ring, it appeared as though Williams and Taylor thought their best approach would be to get an early start. The duo ran the ropes and looked to execute twin suicide dives. The only problem with that was that Bloodline was ready for it. Williams dove headfirst into a running Yakuza Kick from Delgado. Meanwhile Reggie Taylor mistimed his leap, and Mayorga easily side stepped his attempt – sending Taylor to the concrete floor.
Mayorga and Delgado smiled at one and other, and started to turn up the violence. Mayorga picked Taylor up off the floor and held his limp body in place for Delgado who pushed forward and turned him inside out with a vicious clothesline. Mayorga grabbed Williams and repeatedly slammed his head into the arena guardrail. It didn’t take long before a cut would form on the forehead of Williams, and blood was spew all over his own face and chest. Mayorga finished Williams off with a vicious superkick that sent him falling into the front row.
Meanwhile Edgar Delgado had thrown Reggie Taylor into the ring. Delgado looked at the referee and asked him to ‘ring the bell.’ The referee complied, and the match was officially underway. Delgado planted Taylor with a running power slam – before climbing to the top rope and executing a perfect moonsault that had the crowd in awe. Delgado landed firmly, and right into the pinfall situation. The referee made the three count.
Result: Bloodline defeats Spin Cycle via Moonsault [:26]
Post match, Edgar Delgado got on the mic and addressed the Midwestern Pro audience.
Delgado: “That was amateur. Attacking us before the bell was the worst strategy possible and we showed that.”
Mayorga gets a few more licks in on the fallen Reggie Taylor, before standing side by side with Delgado.
Delgado: “Shane Severe… Mitchell Dixon…”
The crowd cheers at hearing the names of two of their heroes being called out.
Delgado: “We haven’t forgotten about what happened a couple of weeks ago. We will be seeing you both very soon.”
Delgado drops the mic, before nodding to Mayorga. The two men absolutely decimated an up and coming tag team, and have gone out of their way to call out another duo with whom they’ve had differences with in recent weeks. Multiply that with their actions in A*P, and we can deduce that Bloodline is a force to be reckoned with as we head into the second half of 2019.
- -
Main Event
NAWC Tag Team Championship Final
60 Minute Time Limit
Manos Del Muerte [Death Adder and Hidealgo 19] (A*P)
vs.
The World Beaters [Jason Brown and Dave Thompson] (CJW)
As time came for the main event, Jon Smith walked down to ringside with the North American Tag Team Championship belts. He placed them on the time keepers table, and sat down at ringside to watch the match itself take place. The World Beaters were out first, and appeared to be all business. They didn’t acknowledge the fans, and walked by a few out stretched hands on their way to the ring. Thompson and Brown went right to the far corner of the ring and watched as their opponents entered the fray.
Hidealgo 19 and Death Adder made their way to the ring, poised to inflict punishment. On most occasions you’ll see upwards of five members of the Manos Del Muerte group together at the same time. El Gran Barbararo must believe that his stable has things under control without his presence.
As the match got underway, it was clear that the fans weren’t sure who to align with. What they hoped for was a showing of tag team excellence. Early on, Hidealgo 19 and Dave Thompson were battling inside the ring, outside of the ring, and showing no ‘backdown’. Thompson would eventually use his size advantage to shift the balance of power over to his team. The World beaters would showcase strong tag team chemistry, as if each man was reading from the same script at all times. Hand signals and eye brow raises were all of the communication needed, as each man seemed to fit effortlessly into their role.
After some double teaming and a couple of near falls – we could Death Adder growing more and more impatient on the sidelines. Adder would try to intimidate the referee into breaking up some of the double team moves being used by his opponents – but to no avail. Hidealgo 19 would eventually slip away from Jason Brown, and make a blind tag to Death Adder, who would blindside Brown with a flying forearm smash from behind. Many vicious stomps would follow, before Brown was shipped off into the ropes and smashed down with a nasty spinebuster.
As Adder and Hidealgo ceased control, they started to build their confidence rather quickly. The duo showed a great deal of strategy and high level thinking when it came to their methods of attack. They would take turns twisting Browns body into positions that he never thought possible – while really synching in their ‘wear down holds’ and took liberties with the amount of leverage being used. It was as if these two men had studied the art of torture, and were applying it with ease in this contest. It was a masterful display – as Adder would smirk as he stretched Brown every which way possible.
The fans started to feel sympathetic, and did do their best to send motivation Brown’s way. Their support seemed to come from the fact that Brown appeared to have ‘had enough’, and that they could see Adder and Hidealgo 19 enjoying their work a little too much.
A break in the match would come for the World Beaters when Brown was able to smack Adder with an enzuguri, and his momentum carried him close enough to his corner to where the long arm of Dave Thompson could secure a ‘hot tag’.
The crowd excitedly cheered for Thompson, who was looking to avenge the beating his tag team partner had endured for the better part of ten minutes. Thompson’s comeback would be short lived, as Death Adder was able to blister him with a front kick to the gut, followed by a DDT. The cover was made, but Jason Brown was able to jump into the ring and make the save before the referee could count to three.
All four men were in the ring, and paired off. Death Adder and Thompson were the legal men. It appeared as though the Manos Del Muerte team was gaining an advantage once again –until Hidealgo 19 was irish whipped into the back of Death Adder and the two collided heads. Hidealgo 19 seemed to get the worst of it, as Death Adder turned around quickly with his right hand cocked to throw a punch. Once Adder realized that it was his tag team partner that hit him, he looked down at the mat confused. In that split second, Jason Brown caught Death Adder with a drop kick that staggered him backwards, into a school boy roll up from Dave Thompson. Thompson grabbed a hand full of tights, to which the referee didn’t see. The referee’s hands hit the mat three times, and The World Beaters had stolen a victory away from Manos Del Muerte, in what would have to be considered – a MAJOR Upset.
As The World Beaters rolled out of the ring to celebrate on the arena floor. We could see Death Adder and Hidealgo 19 going over the final moments of the match – and both men could be seen blaming the other for their misfortunes.
Result: The World Beaters defeat Manos Del Muerte via School Boy rollup [29:12] to become the North American Tag Team Champions
—
Jon Smith handed over the North American Tag team chanpkonship to the duo who wrestle out of the United Kingdom. Jon shook both of their hands, before exiting the camera shot. The new champions embraced, before walking up the ramp. They turned around to see Hidealgo 19 and Death Adder still hashing out their differences.