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deltablues

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WSW Ignition: Grand Prix Night Four (Episode 207)
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Promotion: World Series Wrestling
Date: September 5, 2019
City: Hoffman Estates, IL
Venue: Sears Centre
Attendance: 6,600

The 9/5 Ignition opened with a video package.

A single white spotlight pierces the darkness, revealing the Grand Prix Trophy resting on a black stool. The area around it is unseen — silent, vast, waiting. The voice of Mauro Ranallo narrates the piece:

The passage of time shadows all of us.
Slow, deliberate shots follow:
  • Fans filing into arenas across the country.
  • Hands gripping barricades.
  • Faces screaming in unison.
A quick cut to an empty arena, the ring fully set, lights low.

The opening notes of No Regrets by KSHMR begin to pulse underneath.



But there are times in life — and in professional wrestling — where you are best forgetting all that has happened in getting you here…

Shots are shown of wrestlers getting ready:
  • Wrists taped tight.
  • Boots laced with purpose.
  • Heads bowed, eyes focused.
…and living completely in the moment.
The music builds.

Rapid-fire highlights from the Grand Prix:
  • Will Ospreay’s Hidden Blade crashes into AJ Styles, the moment frozen on impact.
  • Adam Cole’s Last Shot drops Claudio Castagnoli.
  • Cody’s Cross Rhodes levels Bobby Lashley.
  • Bandido’s 21 Plex, the crowd erupting as bodies hit the mat.
The only thing guaranteed in the Grand Prix… is five matches. Five matches in five weeks.

The skyline of Chicago fills the screen as night falls.

Tonight, we head down the home stretch. America’s Second City is the scene for another incredible night…with the best wrestlers in the world pushing themselves further with each passing moment.

The package gets intercut with sit-down interview clips:

BOBBY LASHLEY:

I’ve been fighting my whole life. Anything can happen. There’s no hanging your head and wondering what could have been. You dominate the next moment. And the one after that.

KOTA IBUSHI (in English)

I wouldn’t want this any other way. Best on best. Forever.

WILL OSPREAY

This is a dance with destiny. All that matters is one simple question… are you good enough to reach out and grab everything you’ve always wanted? I live for that.
The music reaches its peak.

Ranallo's narration continues:

It’s almost time for the opening bell. Welcome… to Night Four of the Grand Prix.

The camera cuts inside the Sears Centre where pyro exploded, and the crowd went nuts.

Mauro Ranallo: Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Chicago and welcome to WSW Ignition.

Chael Sonnen: This is Night Four of the Grand Prix, where legacies are defined!

WSW_Grand_Prix_A_Block_Results_Night_Three.jpg


WSW_Grand_Prix_B_Block_Results_Updated.jpg


Match One - B Block: Adam Cole (1-2; 2 Points) vs. Kota Ibushi (3-0; 6 Points)
The first match of Ignition was a B Block contest between Adam Cole and Kota Ibushi.



Adam Cole entered first to Do Your Worst by Rival Sons, sneering and jawing with fans as the boos rained down. Mauro Ranallo immediately framed the match in survival terms.

Mauro Ranallo: For Adam Cole, this is the definition of must win. Lose tonight, and his Grand Prix is over.

Chael Sonnen: To his credit, Adam Cole has shied away from the stakes or the pressure. And that's what makes Adam Cole so dangerous. He's not reckless -- he's calculated. He'll wrestle you straight up...until he decides not to. We saw that last week, he will do whatever it takes to survive.

Kota Ibushi followed to a strong, respectful reaction — not deafening, but appreciative. The crowd understood his importance, with a win tonight, Ibushi could seize a commanding lead in B Block.

At the bell, Cole immediately slid to the floor, smirking as the crowd booed loudly. He clapped mockingly, trying to lure Ibushi outside. Ibushi refused to take the bait, standing calmly in the ring. After several tense seconds, Cole rolled back in.

They locked up, and Ibushi quickly out-grappled Cole, forcing a clean break that drew applause. On the second exchange, Cole yanked Ibushi by the hair and snapped a knee into the midsection. Cole hit the ropes — Ibushi suddenly snapped him forward with a lightning-quick hurricanrana, sending Cole tumbling and scrambling to regain his footing. The crowd popped, catching Cole off guard.

Cole charged again — Ibushi cut him off clean with a sharp dropkick, sending Cole retreating to the floor once more.

Ibushi burst forward and leapt for the Golden Triangle Moonsault, but Cole lunged in and swept his legs as the hit the middle rope. Ibushi CRASHED onto the apron, his legs tangled in the ropes. The crowd groaned. Cole pounced, wrenching viciously on the left knee over the ropes before dropping it hard across the apron edge. He then rammed the knee into the guardrail… and again into the ring post.

Back inside, Cole snapped Ibushi over with a vertical suplex.

1…

Ibushi kicked out quickly.

Cole stomped down on the knee, talking trash the entire time.

A second snap suplex.

1…

2…

Ibushi kicked out again.

Justin Roberts:

Five minutes have elapsed. Fifteen minutes remain.

Cole whipped Ibushi into the corner and charged. Ibushi got a boot up, but Cole stopped short, caught the leg, and tried for a Dragon Screw — only for Ibushi to counter with an enziguri. The crowd popped as Cole staggered.

Ibushi shook out the pain in his knee and rallied with a snap powerslam, followed by a crisp strike combination. He climbed to the middle rope and launched a knee-drop moonsault — but Cole rolled away at the last instant.

Ibushi CRASHED onto his knees and screamed in pain!

Like a snake striking from the grass, Cole pounced with a DDT.

1…


2…

Ibushi kicked out! The crowd clapping rhythmically.

Cole immediately reached for the Figure Four, but Ibushi kicked him away before the hold could be applied.

Cole rebounded off the ropes and went low, trying to clip the knee again...

But Ibushi LEAPT HIGH to avoid him and CRUSHED Cole with a standing double-foot stomp to the back. Ibushi went for the Lawn Dart, but Cole grabbed the referee, using the distraction to slip out!

He then KICKED OUT Ibushi’s knee!

Chael Sonnen: That's the genius of Adam Cole! He's a great wrestler, but when the rules get in the way -- he has no problem bending them.

Cole smashed the knee into the canvas repeatedly, sneering as the boos intensified. He dragged Ibushi to the top rope, hammering punches into the injured leg. He hooked Ibushi, and brought him down with a SUPERPLEX!

1…




2…

Ibushi powered a shoulder up. The crowd cheered, but each pin attempt was getting deeper and deeper.

Cole stalked Ibushi, he lined up his target and charged for the Last Shot......

Ibushi ducked and caught him with a Pele Kick!

Cole stumbled into the ropes and rebounded with a forearm; Ibushi answered with one of his own. The exchange escalated as the crowd rose to its feet!

Ibushi gained the advantage, driving Cole into the corner with repeated forearms. As Ibushi charged again, Cole slipped out to the floor to huge jeers.

Cole pointed at his temple, making sure the Sears Centre knew he was the smartest man in the building.

This was short lived — Ibushi then launched himself...



Golden Triangle Moonsault!



The crowd exploded, but Ibushi immediately grabbed his knee, collapsing beside Cole.

Both men slid back into the ring at the count of 5 on the 20 Count.

Cole struck first with a dropkick to the knee, a dragon screw, and finally locked in the Figure Four!

Ibushi screamed in agony!

Cole wrenched back and screamed:

TAP OUT YOU SON OF A BITCH!

Ibushi flailed in pain as the crowd clapped and stomped in support.

Mauro Ranallo:
Kota Ibushi refuses to give in!

Ibushi dug his finger nails into the cerulean blue canvas and clawed his way to the ropes, forcing the break.

Justin Roberts:

Ten minutes have elapsed. Ten minutes remain.

Ibushi struggled to stand. He used to the ropes to pull himself up, but he collapsed back to the mat. Cole mocked him, slapping him repeatedly!

Cole then SPIT directly in Ibushi’s face. The crowd erupted in fury!

Anger rose in Ibushi's face. He rose slowly, absorbed the slaps, and then FIRED back with a thunderous slap combination that CRACKED through the arena!

POP!

POP!

POP!

Each strike drew a louder reaction. IBUSHI FOLDED COLE IN HALF WITH A LARIAT!

He followed with a deadlift German Suplex!

With adrenaline coursing through his veins. Ibushi powered Cole up and drilled him with the Last Ride Powerbomb.

The Sears Centre rose as one, convinced it was over.

1…




2………………







KICK OUT!


The arena exploded as Cole somehow survived.

Knowing what was at stake, Ibushi pulled himself up. He charged for the Boma Ye...





Cole dodged at the last second, sending Ibushi SMASHING knee-first into the turnbuckles!




Cole followed with a backstabber — but Ibushi POPPED UP TO HIS FEET AND ROARED!

BOMA YE!

Both men collapsed to the mat, the crowd chanting in appreciation.

They rose unsteadily and met in the center. Ibushi ducked a superkick. Cole ducked a roundhouse. Ibushi connected with a jumping knee strike and followed with the Lawn Dart, driving Cole into the turnbuckles.

Ibushi grabbed the wrists and went for Kamigoye....






He yanked Cole......





But Cole stomped down violently on the injured knee at the last possible instant, collapsing Ibushi’s base.




Cole hoisted him up and drove him down with a brainbuster across his knee.






1…

2………………







Ibushi somehow kicked out!

Cole was in disbelief!

Mauro Ranallo:
The Grand Prix tests the mind, the body, and the soul. Kota Ibushi has been brilliant through the first three weeks -- and we're seeing that fighting spirit here tonight. He refuses to go down!

Cole charged for the Last Shot!











NO!









Ibushi ducked and rolled him up.




1…










2…


Cole kicked out and sprang to his feet.

SUPERKICK TO THE KNEE!

IBUSHI COLLAPSED!

SUPERKICK TO THE JAW!

SUPERKICK TO THE HEAD!

Cole backed up.











LAST SHOT!









1.......





2............................................





3.........................................................................................

Adam Cole (14:36)

Adam Cole (2-2; 4 Points) | Kota Ibushi (3-1; 6 Points)

Cole exploded to his feet, screaming into the hard camera.

I TOLD YOU! I TOLD YOU!
The crowd showered him with venomous boos as Cole pounded his chest and pointed to himself. He yelled:

I'M STILL HERE! BELIEVE IN ADAM COLE!

Ibushi remained on the canvas clutching his knee, face twisted in pain. Cole climbed the ropes, soaking in the hatred — alive in the Grand Prix by any means necessary.

Story of the match was Cole in pure survival mode vs. the resilient front-runner. Great storytelling match with the knee. We wanted to establish Cole as a heel that cheats selectively. He's an elite wrestler, but he will cheat when necessary. Crowd knew they hated Cole, but they firmly got behind Ibushi as the match got deeper and he refused to give in.


A vignette aired.

Sunlight reflects off the deep metallic paint of a black Mercedes-Benz S-Class, idling curbside. The car is spotless. The kind of expensive that never looks rushed.

The driver’s door opens.

MJF steps out wearing a perfectly tailored charcoal three-piece suit, crisp white shirt, no tie. Gold watch. Italian loafers. Every detail intentional. He adjusts his cufflinks as if the camera itself is beneath him.

He leans casually against the hood of the car. As his voice narrated:

Everyone keeps asking the same question.

Cut to MJF strolling down a city sidewalk. People pass by him. No one is acknowledged.

Who is MJF?
The camera cuts to an upscale outdoor cafe in Manhattan. There are marble tables and white linen. MJF sits alone. A server places an elaborate drink in front of him — foam, garnish, artistry.

MJF looks at the drink.

He looks at the server.

He slides it away and speaks:

Yeah… no.

The server hesitates, as MJF continues:

I didn’t order cute.

The server retreats, embarrassed.

MJF's narration continues:

I’ll tell you who I’m not.
A stylish, attractive woman approaches, phone in hand.

Oh my god, Max… how are you? I had so much fun with you last weekend. I’ve texted you a couple times…

MJF doesn’t stand. He barely looks up.

“Did you?”

He finally meets her eyes, unimpressed.

“Look, sweetheart — if I don’t remember you…”

He gives a small, dismissive shrug.

“…it wasn’t important.”
She stands there for a beat, stunned. MJF turns away without another word.

The camera cuts quickly to give a further glimpse into MJF's life:
  • A velvet rope lifted immediately as MJF approaches.
  • A valet jogging to open his car door.
  • MJF checking his reflection in a mirrored storefront.
MJF's narration continues:

I’m not one of you. I don’t wait in lines. I don’t earn approval.

Cut to MJF seated inside the Mercedes now, engine running, one hand on the steering wheel. He finally looks directly into the camera.

Respect is something that only matters to poor people.
The camera cuts to see MJF exiting an elevator into a modern glass lobby. Heads turn. He doesn’t slow down.

I wasn’t born to struggle. I wasn’t raised to grind. I was raised to expect better.
Cut back to the café. The untouched drink still sits on the table. MJF stands to leave. The server reaches out, unsure.

MJF pulls out a thick roll of cash, peels off a bill, and drops it on the table without looking. He says:

Relax. That’s more than you make in a week.

He stops at the door and turns just enough for the camera to catch the grin.

People like you watch wrestling to feel important. People like me?

He removes his sunglasses.

We are important.

MJF smirks.

I’m better than you…

He leans toward the camera.

…and you know it.
The screen cuts to black.

White text fades in:

WHO IS MJF?

COMING SOON.


A promo aired for Grand Prix Finals.

Saturday, September 21… the 2019 Grand Prix reaches its climax.

From the legendary Cow Palace, the very best in the world collide as the Grand Prix Finals take center stage.

Who will punch their ticket to November Reign?

Grand Prix Finals — streaming live, globally, on Netflix.


Match Two - A Block: Austin Aries (0-3; 0 Points) vs. Ricochet (1-2; 2 Points)
The second match of Ignition was in the A Block and featured winless Austin Aries against Ricochet.

Mauro Ranallo framed the stakes immediately:

Ricochet does not control his destiny in the A Block, but make no mistake — he must keep winning. Austin Aries, meanwhile, is fighting to avoid the nightmare of going winless.
They tied up. Aries snapped Ricochet down with a sharp arm drag, popped to his feet, and climbed the turnbuckles, throwing his arms wide. The Sears Centre booed loudly. Aries smiled bitterly and flipped them off.

Chael Sonnen: That’s not confidence. That’s a man trying to convince himself he still belongs.

They came together again. Ricochet slipped into a side headlock. Aries shot him off — Ricochet leapfrogged, snapped into a handstand, and whipped Aries down with a flawless headscissors takedown. The crowd reacted instantly.

Ricochet followed with a picture-perfect dropkick that sent Aries tumbling to the floor.

Aries scrambled back inside before Ricochet could pursue. He caught Ricochet charging in and snapped him over with a flying body scissors, rolling fluidly into a single-leg crab. Aries tried to transition into the Last Chancery, but Ricochet fought desperately and reached the ropes before the deadly submission could get locked in.

Aries fired a kick — Ricochet answered with a sudden discus clothesline that knocked Aries back to the floor again.

Ricochet charged the ropes for a dive. Aries moved. Ricochet caught the top rope effortlessly and flipped to his feet on the apron, drawing a roar!

He snapped a PK to Aries’ face, then leapt off the apron with a running shooting star press...




NO!




Aries to meet him mid-air with a perfectly timed dropkick!




Ricochet SPLATTERED onto the black floor mats!

Mauro Ranallo: The athletic intuition of Ricochet is off the charts — but Austin Aries is fighting with desperation.

Aries rolled Ricochet back inside and unloaded with stomps in the corner. The referee administered the 5 Count.

...Three...Four!
Aries shoved him away and screamed:

Don’t touch me!

Aries dragged Ricochet up in the corner, but Ricochet fought back with sharp kicks. Aries shot Ricochet into the ropes. Ricochet blocked a back body drop with a boot to the face and dropped Aries with a rolling front dropkick. Ricochet poured on strikes in the corner and went for a 619 — Aries slid out of range.

Aries tried a German suplex. Ricochet flipped through and landed on his feet. Aries charged again — Ricochet sidestepped and hit a drop toe hold that sent him chest-first into the middle turnbuckle.

Ricochet drilled the 619 cleanly!

Ricochet sprang to the top rope and crushed Aries with a springboard European uppercut, then flowed directly into a standing shooting star press.

COVER!

1…



2…


Aries kicked out, slapping the mat in frustration.

Justin Roberts:

Five minutes have elapsed. Fifteen minutes remain.
Ricochet went to the apron, vaulted to the top, and flew...

Springboard 450 Splash — Aries rolled away. Ricochet landed on his feet and rolled through. Both men met in the center of the ring, trading strikes. Chops echoed through the building. Both men fired simultaneous discus forearms — neither went down.

They hit the ropes and collided with a simultaneous crossbodies, crashing to the canvas!

Both men staggered up. Suplex attempts were countered again and again. Ricochet cracked Aries with a back elbow and went for a Lionsault — Aries moved. Ricochet landed on his feet, but TURNED RIGHT INTO A ROLLING ELBOW STRIKE!

Aries exploded, hooking Ricochet and driving him down with a Death Valley Driver. He covered.

1…



2………………

KICK OUT!


The crowd cheered.

Aries rose and grabbed Ricochet by the face. He screamed:

“THIS IS MINE! I BUILT THIS!”

Chael Sonnen noted:

Listen to him — that’s a man terrified of being left behind.

Aries dragged Ricochet up and doubled him over with a kick, then began throwing closed-fist punches.

Mauro Ranallo: The referee warning Aries — those fists are born of desperation!

Aries lifted Ricochet for the Brainbuster. Ricochet slipped free mid-lift with a knee to the head and fired a pump kick. Aries answered immediately with a chop to the throat and a sharp enziguri, then went back for the Brainbuster.

Ricochet countered in mid-motion with the Stundog Millionaire, snapping Aries down.

Ricochet exploded to his feet, seized his opening, and drilled Aries with the Benadryller.

1…





2…





3..............................

Ricochet (9:46)

Ricochet (2-2; 4 Points) | Austin Aries (0-4; 0 Points)

Ricochet sat up slowly, breathing hard, then rose and acknowledged the crowd with a nod.

Mauro Ranallo: Another statement from Ricochet. Another reminder that when he shifts into that next gear, he is one of the most spectacular competitors in the world.
Aries remained seated on the mat, staring forward in disbelief before rolling out of the ring, jaw clenched, his Grand Prix unraveling before his eyes.

Simple match designed to showcase the ability of Ricochet while also continuing the story with Aries. These two work extremely well together. One of our goals is to showcase Ricochet as one of the most talented wrestlers in the world; especially, with his body control and skill set. He cannot feel like "just another guy" in Golden Triangle.


A vignette aired. The screen fades in slowly from black.

Early morning light stretches across quiet residential streets.

An establishing shot shows a street sign that reads: Welcome To Livingston, New Jersey.
The camera pans through the town and we see:
  • Sidewalks still damp from the night air.
  • Traffic lights blinking yellow.
  • Houses sitting still, untouched by the day.
Inside an SUV, headlights cut through the dawn. Deonna Purrazzo grips the steering wheel. She is wearing workout gear -- hair tied back, no makeup. Just focus.

The camera focuses on her hand gripping the wheel. She speaks to cameraman as she drives.

The house I grew up in is actually down that street.

The car turns.

I’ve always felt the most peace when I’m home.

It’s where I feel grounded.

Another close-up — her hands tighten slightly on the wheel.

With everything going on right now…I really need that.

The SUV pulls into an industrial lot. The headlights wash over a brick wall. A metal door. A gym waking up.

The camera cuts to a sit-down interview with Dominic Purrazzo, Deonna's brother, sitting at a kitchen table:

My sister has always been the most passionate person I know. When she sets her mind on something, there’s nothing — and no one — that’s going to stop her.

Back inside the gym we see:
  • Deonna’s hands chalked white.
  • A weighted sled scraping across the floor.
  • Plates clanging.
  • Sweat running down her face.
Cut to an interview with Deonna's mother. She sits on a living room couch and speaks directly to the camera:

When Deonna was eight years old, she told me she wanted to be a professional wrestler.

(laughs)
I was shocked. But as a mother, you always support your children. Little did I know...that wasn't a childish wish. That was a little girl stating her dream.

Back in the gym, we see:
  • Deonna bench pressing.
  • Hands taping wrists.
  • Locking up in the ring.
Cut to an interview with Deonna's father. He sits behind a desk, clutching a cup of coffee and talks to the camera:

She’s always pushed herself to be the best. Athletically. Academically.

If there was a scoreboard...she was hellbent on winning. (laughs)

Back in the gym, Deonna has transitioned to training:
  • Deonna snaps on the Fujiwara Armbar.
  • A training partner immediately taps.
Cut to:

Kay Lee Ray sitting in the empty seats of an arena. In the background, we can see the ring crew setting up for a past episode of Ignition.

Women’s wrestling wasn’t always what it is now.

For so long it wasn't about your ability, it was more cosmetic. People just didn't understand women's wrestling.

If you really wanted this — and I mean really wanted it — you had to grind. There was nothing glamorous about the way Deonna broke in. She was just a tough girl from New Jersey who refused to let her dream die.
As Kay Lee Ray speaks we see:
  • Old photos of Deonna as a teenager in wrestling school.
  • Grainy footage from early independent shows.
Cut to:

Footage from last week — Deonna Purrazzo and Tessa Blanchard, face to face, the Women's World Championship match made official.

Cut to and interview with Chael Sonnen. Chael sits in an official WSW interview area talking into the camera:

Make no mistake about it — Tessa Blanchard is THE champion.

She doesn’t just hold that title. She lives her life as the World Champion. That’s a weight you carry every single day.

And Tessa carries it like a badge of honor.

The camera cuts back to the SUV driving again. Deonna's hands are steady on the wheel. She talks:

I started training to be a wrestler the day after I graduated high school. I think my parents thought this was a wild idea that would fizzle out. I waitressed at that Chili’s right there my senior year to pay the tuition.

Deonna looks out the window a pauses for just a moment.

Now…

In three weeks... I’m wrestling Tessa Blanchard for the World Championship.”

Cut to Mauro Ranallo. Ranallo leans back in his chair at the announce desk as he speaks. In the background we see production people working:

Deonna Purrazzo has been here before. She stood across the ring from Tessa Blanchard at SummerFest

One of the biggest nights in the history of WSW. And she lost.

Silence hangs after that last statement.

Highlights are shown of the Purrazzo vs. Blanchard match at SummerFest. These are intercut with Deonna training. The music cuts, all we hear is her breathing and exertion.
Cut back to Mauro Ranallo:

Since that moment, she has been laser focused on Diamond, and laser focused on earning another shot at Tessa Blanchard.

Cut back to Dominic Purrazzo:

I’ve watched her succeed. I’ve watched her fail. But no matter what… she always moves forward.

The SUV pulls into a parking lot and the camera show the sign outside the building.

D2W WRESTLING ACADEMY – WHARTON, NJ

Deonna steps inside.

A massive training space. Rings. Weights. History lining the walls.

She passes a large framed photo of herself. She says:

This is where it all began for me. Every day, I'd drive over to Wharton, and just live in here.

Deonna approached one of the rings and ran her hand over the canvas.

There’s a lot of blood, sweat, and tears soaked into this mat.

I wouldn’t change it for the world.

Intercut shots are shown of:
  • Deonna coaching students.
  • Demonstrating holds.
  • Rolling in the ring.
Chael Sonnen's voice is heard:

Deonna Purrazzo is genuine in a way that’s rare in professional sports. She’s never forgotten where she came from.

That’s why people rally behind her.

Deonna stands in the ring, and students sit around her. She addresses them:

Find what makes you different. Find your why — because you are going to fail -- I can promise you that. When you have that why to fall back on -- that will get you through tough time. How you respond… that’s what defines you.

A student raises a hand, and Deonna nods in his direction. The student asks:

What’s your why?

Deonna looks around the room. At the faces. At the ring.

It’s this.

It’s all of you.

I want to do this for me…and I want to do it for you. It wasn't too long ago that I was in the same exact spot you are.

I want to bring that belt back in here for all of us.

A student shouts:

Go kick Tessa’s ass, Deonna!

Cheers and laughter are heard. For the first time in the piece, Deonna smiles.

A final montage is shown:
  • Baby photos.
  • Childhood snapshots.
  • Teenage training footage.
  • Independent shows.
  • WSW debut.
  • Present-day Deonna leaning against the ropes at D2W, her hands resting on the top rope.
We hear the voice of Deonna's mother:

Winning that belt would be the pinnacle of her career.
The voice of Dominic Purrazzo is heard:

She won’t rest until she beats Tessa Blanchard.

The image holds on Deonna — calm, centered.

The camera fades to black.


Match Three - B Block: "The Assassin" Claudio Castagnoli (0-3; 0 Points) vs. Bobby Lashley (1-2; 2 Points)
The third match of Ignition was in the B Block, and featured Claudio Castagnoli taking on Bobby Lashley. The atmosphere shifted the moment Claudio Castagnoli stepped onto the stage. Noticeably, there was no Salina de la Renta.

Mauro Ranallo and Chael Sonnen immediately called attention to the absence.

Mauro Ranallo: No Salina de la Renta tonight — that is impossible to ignore.

Chael Sonnen: She's been visibly frustrated with Castagnoli throughout this tournament. The question is...does this calm him down or does it push him further over the edge?

Graphics confirmed the grim reality: Castagnoli was already eliminated from the Grand Prix, now 0–3, and winless in singles competition dating back to his World Championship loss to Kenny Omega.

Mauro Ranallo stated the scary truth:

This is a man with nothing left to lose.

Bobby Lashley followed, intense and focused. Commentary reminded viewers that Lashley sat at 1–2 — still alive, but a loss here would mathematically eliminate him. His right elbow was wrapped tightly with a black band, an ever present reminder of the bone spurs in that joint.

There was no feeling-out process.

They met in the center of the ring and collided shoulder-to-shoulder — neither man giving an inch. Lashley struck first, muscling Castagnoli up and dumping him with a thunderous German Suplex.

Castagnoli popped straight back to his feet.

The crowd roared.

They circled again. Castagnoli shot in and fired back with a German suplex of his own, dropping Lashley high on his back. Lashley immediately popped to his feet and shook his head.

They locked up a third time, but Lashley showed his scary quickness. He got waist control, locked his hands again — one German… then another — but Castagnoli rolled through both and staggered up, teeth clenched, eyes wild!

Castagnoli unloaded with brutal uppercuts, snapping Lashley’s head back. Lashley ate the strikes. He caught the arm of Castagnoli and tried to cinch in a Head and Arm Choke, but Castagnoli slipped free, hit the ropes, and DESTROYED Lashley with a discus uppercut!

Another discus uppercut sent Lashley crashing through the ropes to the floor.

Castagnoli followed. He charged on the outside — Lashley moved — and Castagnoli SMASHED shoulder-first into the barricade.

Mauro Ranallo: This is where Salina de la Renta usually reins Claudio in. As wicked as she is, she had an innate ability to keep Castagnoli focused on the winning tactics.

Chael Sonnen: With her...he is completely off the chain!
CHAEL SONNEN:

“Without her? He’s completely off the chain.”

Lashley pounced, raining down savage ground-and-pound strikes on the floor. Castagnoli snarled, surged forward, and drove Lashley back-first into the ring post.

Castagnoli ripped the wrap off Lashley’s elbow.

He slammed it into the steel.

He pinned it against the post.

And CRUSHED it with a running boot!

Back inside, Castagnoli stomped the elbow again… and again… and again.

Castagnoli hurled Lashley into the corner and charged — one running uppercut… a second — Lashley slipped out on the third and countered with a one-armed German Suplex, dumping Castagnoli hard on his neck!

Another German followed.

Lashley sprawled, took Castagnoli’s back, and delivered savage anvil elbows to the neck — all with his good arm. He locked in the Head and Arm Choke!

The building held its breath.




LASHLEY SQUEEZED IN!




HE CRIED OUT!





LASHLEY'S ELBOW BUCKLED!



He let go of the submission, and grabbed the injured elbow!

Castagnoli exploded, hoisting Lashley onto his shoulders and driving him down with a crushing TKO that rattled the ring!

Castagnoli stalked his prey.

DISCUS UPPERCUT!

Lashley folded.

1…



2…

Lashley kicked out!

Justin Roberts:

Five minutes have elapsed. Fifteen minutes remain.

Castagnoli moved with terrifying speed, rage etched across his face, stomping relentlessly on the damaged elbow. He dropped down into an armbar.

Lashley screamed, clasping his hands together to avoid having the arm get straightened out. In desperation, and with raw strength, Lashley powered up...


POWERBOMB!


But Castagnoli refused to release!



With every vein and muscle in his body bulging, Lashley tried again! He lifted...



The arm failed him.



Castagnoli smashed him with a headbutt… then wrenched him over into a KIMURA!

Lashley fought! The pain was all over his face!

The crowd rose.

The damage was too much.





Bobby Lashley tapped out!

The crowd gasped!

Claudio Castagnoli (6:52)

Claudio Castagnoli (1-3; 2 Points) | Bobby Lashley (1-3; 2 Points)

Mauro Ranallo exclaimed:

MAMA MIA! LASHLEY HAS TAPPED OUT! FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER IN WSW!

Castagnoli did not release the hold!

The referee screamed at him.

Castagnoli cranked harder -- he wanted to break the arm of Bobby Lashley!

Lashley went limp....

HE PASSED OUT!

Referees poured into the ring. After several terrifying seconds, Castagnoli finally released the submission.

He rose slowly, chest heaving, foaming at the mouth. His eyes locked on the hard camera.

Castagnoli screamed:

SALINA! AM I VIOLENT ENOUGH NOW?!
The camera lingered on Lashley as officials checked on him — unconscious — while Castagnoli stood in the ring… eliminated, unhinged… and more dangerous than ever.

This match was put together to feel more like a fight than a wrestling match. This was always going to be short and violent.

We needed to re-establish Castagnoli. The losses he has suffered have been part of his arc. This was an emphatic win, scoring the first tap out of Lashley. The goal was to ensure that Castagnoli would be viewed as a top-tier threat with this result.

Lashley lost nothing; the tap felt earned and historic. He can now depart and get surgery to come back 100%.


A vignette aired. The screen fades in to a sun-drenched aerial shot of Los Angeles.

Palm trees sway. Glass towers gleam. Traffic crawls.

A pristine rooftop infinity pool overlooks the city. Electronic music hums softly underneath the scene — stylish, empty, expensive.

Johnny Mundo lounges poolside in designer sunglasses, shirtless, towel draped casually over his shoulders. Taya Valkyrie reclines beside him, perfectly styled, scrolling her phone. Mike Bennett stands a few feet away — noticeably less relaxed — struggling to assemble an elaborate collapsible lounge setup, sweat already forming.

Taya looks up from her phone, smirking.

Babe… you would not believe how many media requests we’re getting.

She turns the phone toward Mundo.

They want to talk you about Brian Cage.

(mocking tone) Johnny… why did you do what you did?

Mundo laughs — light at first. Amused. Almost playful. He said:

And let’s talk about results.

He gestures around broadly.

LA Express has been on a win streak ever since I made a very simple executive decision.

We trimmed the fat.

He snaps his fingers and looks sharply toward Bennett.

Right, Mike?

Bennett pauses mid-screw, nods instinctively.

Yeah— yeah, absolutely.
The collapsible lounge chair suddenly gives way, one leg folding in on itself.

Bennett winces. Under his breath he utters:

Damnit…

Mundo took off his sunglasses and his tone changes, becoming more sinister:

I've also made myself very clear. You want answers? You want me to talk? I want Melissa Santos.

Melissa, that's your boyfriend. No one's seen him for weeks because of what I did...don't YOU want answers?!

I can only be patient for so long...then...something bad may happen.

Taya utters an evil cackle, not even trying to hide it. She looks at her husband:

God, Johnny, you’re ruthless.

She scrolls her phone again, unfazed.

Also — side note — I really want an oat milk lavender matcha with collagen.

She looks at Bennett.

We’re out.

Bennett blinks. Bennett realizes this is suddenly his problem:

(sighs) I’ll just order it on my phone.

He starts walking off, already pulling his phone out.

Mundo watches him go, then smirks back toward the camera, changing his tone back to light hearted.

Look at that.

A perfect system.

He slips his sunglasses back on, draping his arm around Taya as they sink into the lounge chairs.

Some people fight their whole lives trying to make it.

Taya leans in, grinning.

Taya Valkyrie: And some people…

Johnny Mundo: Well baby...we're just born better. NO ONE has it better than us!

The camera smash cuts to black.


Backstage, Todd Keneley stood in the interview area. Beside him was the WSW Women’s World Champion Tessa Blanchard, flanked by Tenille Dashwood and Nixon Newell. Blanchard wore the championship over her shoulder, relaxed posture, cold eyes — completely at home.

Todd Keneley: Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to Ignition. I’m joined by the WSW Women’s World Champion — Tessa Blanchard — and Diamond.

Last week, the match was made official. At Grand Prix Finals on September 21st — it will be Tessa Blanchard defending the Women’s World Championship against Deonna Purrazzo. Earlier tonight, we saw an extensive look at Deonna’s journey. Tessa, your thoughts?

Tessa Blanchard: (smirked)My thoughts?

Todd, I don’t drive around sad streets looking for motivation. I wake up every day as the World Champion. I walk with dominance, and I talk with dominance. I am closing in on one full year as Women’s World Champion — and I’m not slowing down.

Deonna Purrazzo talks a lot about pressure. Let me make something very clear.

(Blanchard tapped the gold belt)

Diamond doesn’t shine because it’s pretty. It shines because it survives pressure.

Deonna is the last one.

The last line of defense for this women’s division.

Because after her...There’s no one left.

I will have beaten them all.

While she’s driving around New Jersey reminiscing about the past…

I’m splitting time between my condo in Miami Beach, my penthouse in Atlanta, and my brownstone in New York City.

I'm 24 years old, and I’m doing all of that before most people figure out who they are.

Todd Keneley: At the Grand Prix Finals, it’s been agreed — no Diamond members at ringside. Just you and Deonna. Any concern?

Tessa Blanchard: (scoffed) Concern?

Look at the posters. Look at the billboards. WSW is the future of professional wrestling — and it's MY picture on ALL of them. I am the FACE of WSW.

I don’t need help. I never have.

Any other questions?

Blanchard stepped back impatiently. She appeared ready to walk off, but Nixon Newell shifted… then stepped forward.

Yeah. I’ve got one.

Tenille Dashwood looked surprised. Newell said:

Wrong time, wrong place maybe — but what the hell were you talking about last week when you called us scraps?

Blanchard slowly turned toward Newell.

Yeah.

Wrong time. Wrong place.

She stepped closer.

You had your chance against Deonna.

And you failed!

Let me make myself perfectly clear. Until someone proves otherwise —I’m the reason Diamond shines.

Tessa turned away and said:

Tenille — get the car ready. We’ve got a business trip to take.

Nixon Newell started to follow. Blanchard stopped her.

There was a tense beat as they stood eye-to-eye. Blanchard said:

You’ve got a match on OverDrive.

A cold smile appeared on the World Champion's face.

Do me a favor…actually win this one for us.

Blanchard walked off. Tenille followed. Nixon lingered for a moment, conflicted, then walked the opposite direction.


The camera cut back inside the arena where Melissa Santos stood in the ring.

Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the WSW Intercontinental Champion, "The American Nightmare" CODY!



The reaction is immediate.

A THUNDEROUS OVATION erupts as Cody walked out, the WSW Intercontinental Championship slung over his shoulder. He paused on the stage, closing his eyes for a moment, and soaking it in — not basking, feeling. Pyro exploded around him.

He walked to the ring deliberately, slapping hands, nodding.

Cody shook Melissa Santos' hand. She rose the microphone to ask him a question, but the Chicago crowd sounded out:

CODY! CODY! CODY!
After a moment, Santos said:

Cody, you were originally scheduled to face Jon Moxley tonight; however, due to his injury -- you have been awarded two points in the B Block. With that result…you are now tied for the lead in the B Block!

She placed the microphone in front of him. Cody said:

Chicago…

Huge pop.

I would’ve rather been wrestling tonight. But there was no way I was coming into this building — no way I was coming into this city — and not standing right here, looking at all of you, and feeling this!

He gestured to the crowd.

Because this… this feeling right here?

This is JOY.

The word hangs.

And for a very long time… I forgot what that felt like.

He adjusted the Intercontinental Championship on his shoulder.

Right now, I’m your Intercontinental Champion. Next week in Boston, I walk into Night Five of the Grand Prix with a chance to win the B Block. And if I do that… September 21st… Grand Prix Finals.

The crowd buzzed.

Win there…

Cody smiled.

And it’s Madison Square Garden. A building I dreamed about as a kid. A chance to put a Rhodes in the main event of the Garden for the first time in 42 years.

His smile faded slightly.

So in theory… I should be full.

I should be happy.

This is what I wanted when I cleared that proverbial ledger. This is what I wanted when I pulled myself out of the wreckage… and the ashes… of Revolver.

And yet…I’m being haunted by a ghost.

Cody looked directly into the camera.

Let me tell you a story.

There was once a young wrestler. Talented. Hungry. Desperate to be a star. A main eventer. A world champion.

He busted his ass every single day — learning the business, doing things the right way.

He scoffed.

And still… he was branded with a scarlet letter.


Potential.

The crowd murmured.

And the wrestling business?

It can be a cold, scary place… if you let it.

His tone darkened.

That young man listened to the devil on his shoulder. He decided he would spit in the face of anyone who dared put a ceiling on him. He embraced the bitterness...

And he got everything he thought he wanted.

Cody stopped.

That man’s name… is Ethan Carter.

Boos rained down.

Ethan Carter became the leader of Revolver. He became a World Champion...but he wanted MORE. He wanted more, because despite all the material success, he still had an emptiness inside him.

See — misery loves company. And if he could manipulate other minds… pull them under his wing…maybe he could convince himself that he was right. That his anger was justified.

His voice softened.

And I fell victim to it.

Silence.

True to his word…I got everything I thought I wanted.

The money.

The marquee.

The main event.

The World Championship.

A pause.

Until I didn’t.

Cody looked down at the mat.

I let hate consume me.

I let anger drive me.

I let bitterness define me.

He looked up.

And the scariest part?

I liked it.

The crowd was silent, hanging on every word.

I liked what it brought me. Until I looked in the mirror… and hated the man staring back.

Cody straightened.

There comes a time when we all must answer for our sins. I had to.

His voice strengthened.

For fourteen months, I walked to hell and back. I stared the devil in the eye…

A grin broke through.

“And I told him to kiss my ass!”

The building explodes.

I thought this ended at Undisputed.

But Ethan Carter is a man who wants to set the world on fire… just to watch it burn.

His tone sharpened.

How many more people have to get hurt?

Karl Anderson, the 12 staples that were put into my head...

My own wife.

Boos intensify.

Our history is bound in blood.

Cody lifted the Intercontinental Championship and pressed it to his chest.

And now you’ve named your price. The Intercontinental Title.

He stepped forward.

But understand this.

I'm not fighting you because I want revenge.

I'm fighting you because I'm fighting for WHO I HAVE BECOME!

Huge reaction.

You don’t get to steal my joy.

You don’t get to drag me back into the darkness.

Cody pointed into the camera.

I know how this ends.

We’ll shed blood once more.

So just say WHEN, Ethan.

I’m not hard to find.

And every single one of us is tired of your videos.

The crowd roared

We’re tired of waiting.

NOW LET'S DO THIS!

JUST SAY WHEN, BECAUSE I'M READY!

The Sears Centre erupted as Cody stood in the ring, chest heaving — not fueled by hate… but by joy.


Match Five - A Block: Bandido (1-2; 2 Points) vs. "The Phenomenal" AJ Styles (1-2; 2 Points)
The fifth match of Ignition was an A Block match between Bandido and AJ Styles.



The Sears Centre buzzed the moment Narco sounded out, and Bandido came on-stage. Mauro Ranallo immediately framed the significance of his Grand Prix run.

Few competitors have turned more heads in this tournament than Bandido. One of the most praised luchadors to emerge from Mexico in years — and he has absolutely proved that he belongs on this stage.

High above the ring, LFI, RUSH and Dragon Lee were shown once again watching from their suite, eyes locked on the action.

Chael Sonnen noticed this:

They’re scouting, Mauro. And they’re watching someone who’s proving he can hang with anyone in the world.



AJ Styles followed to a massive ovation. The reaction was instant and sustained.

Mauro Ranallo: Last week, AJ Styles and Will Ospreay may have delivered the greatest match in Grand Prix history — and Styles lost it in the final three seconds.

Chael Sonnen: The 2018 Grand Prix winner is on the outside looking in. All he can do tonight is win… and hope.

Inside the ring, Styles extended his hand.

Bandido shook it.

The crowd applauded — respect before violence.

They locked up tightly. Bandido struck first with quick, sharp strikes, but Styles answered with a sudden dropkick that knocked Bandido back to the apron.

Bandido stunned Styles with a gamengiri from the apron, then slipped back inside and cinched in a Romero Special, pulling Styles’ arms high. The crowd reacted loudly as Styles grimaced and fought toward the ropes, finally forcing the break.

Bandido charged — Styles cut him off with a back elbow, followed by a clean suplex and a knee drop.

COVER!

1…


2…

Bandido kicked out!

The crowd began chanting for both men.

LET'S GO AJ! BAN-DI-DO!

Styles stayed on him with a sliding lariat, then a leaping kick to the head for another two-count.

Bandido reversed a whip into the corner, and cracked Styles with a hard chop. Bandido drilled a sharp kick to the head that sent Styles tumbling awkwardly through the ropes to the floor.

Bandido hit the ropes...


TOPE SUICIDA!


Styles CRASHED into the steel guardrail on impact!


Bandido wasn’t done.


He placed Styles seated on the guardrail, got back into the ring and launched himself again — another tope...




IT CONNECTED!




STYLES FLEW OFF THE GUARDRAIL AND INTO THE FIRST ROW!


The Sears Centre erupted!


Bandido scrambled back inside and set himself again! Bandido was going to fly into the crowd!


He sprinted…



TOPE SUICIDA.............................................









STYLES VAULTED TO THE RAIL AND INTERCEPTED HIM WITH A FOREARM MID-FLIGHT!








Bandido was cut out of the air!







HOLY SHIT! HOLY SHIT! HOLY SHIT!

Justin Roberts

Five minutes have expired. Fifteen minutes remain.

Back inside, Styles planted Bandido with the Ushigoroshi.


1…






2…


Bandido kicked out!


Styles followed with a seated facebuster slam, followed by another cover.


1…


2…


Again, Bandido kicked out.

Styles went for the Styles Clash — Bandido tried to counter with a back body drop — Styles held on, rolled through into a sunset flip.

1…

Bandido reversed.

1…


2…


Styles kicked out!


Both men scrambled up.

Bandido was quicker, and he snapped Styles down with a pop-up cutter, then roared as the crowd came alive. He shimmied his shoulders...

Bandido hit the first Amigo suplex.

A second.

He went for the third —

Styles countered, dragging him down into the Calf Slicer!

The building rose as Bandido fought. He reached in vain for the ropes, but they were too far away!

Bandido's hand hovered over the mat, but he balled it up into a fist!

Bandido reached back...and started SLAMMING STYLES' HEAD INTO THE MAT!

AGAIN AND AGAIN!

The hold finally broke. Bandido rolled away, clutching his leg, clearly affected.

Styles gathered himself and surged forward, springing to the ropes for the Phenomenal Forearm — Bandido shoved him to the floor instead.

Bandido exploded with a picture-perfect Tornillo to the outside, crashing into Styles!

He followed with a running dropkick that sent Styles into the guardrail.

Styles answered back, grabbing Bandido and driving him over the timekeeper’s table, both men crashing hard!

The referee began the 20 Count.

At the count of 8, the men emerged from the toppled table and got back into the ring.

The two men rose and COLLIDED with simultaneous clotheslines.

Neither man went down.

The crowd lost it.

They hit the ropes again. Styles swung with a lariat...Bandido countered with a standing Spanish Fly!

Both men lay still.

Justin Roberts:

Ten minutes have expired. Ten minutes remain.

Slowly, they rose. Styles used the ropes. Bandido saw it.

Bandido charged for the 21 Plex — but before he could grab Styles his damaged leg buckled. Styles TURNED HIM INSIDE OUT WITH A LARIAT.


BLOODY SUNDAY DDT!


1…





2…







KICK OUT!


The crowd rose to their feet!


Styles went to the apron. He vaulted to the top!








PHENOMENAL FOREARM—







NO! Bandido caught him on his shoulders...and DRILLED THE X KNEE!


1…







2…









Styles KICKED OUT!


Bandido struggled to his feet and climbed — hopping on one leg — middle rope… top rope…


He went for the homerun shot. He crossed himself and launched for the Phoenix Splash....
Bandido twisted through the air...


STYLES CAUGHT HIM MID-MOTION.














STYLES CLASH.











COVER!


1…









2………






3.

AJ STYLES (13:00)

AJ STYLES (2-2; 4 Points) | Bandido (1-3; 2 Points)

The Sears Centre erupted at the breathtaking final sequence. Styles remained seated for a moment, breathing hard, soaking it in. Bandido lay nearby, exhausted but defiant.


Styles rose… and offered his hand.


Bandido looked up, rose to his feet, and took it.


The crowd applauded loudly.

Mauro Ranallo: Bandido has earned the respect of the world — but tonight belongs to AJ Styles.

Chael Sonnen: Tonight, we saw why AJ Styles is a living legend...he always finds a way, Mauro.

Up in the suite, LFI were shown watching intently, unreadable.


Styles stood tall, alive in the A Block.

Bandido walked out to a standing ovation.

The finish of this match was fantastic. We need to ensure the Phoenix Splash into the Styles Clash is on every highlight package we have moving forward.

Babyface vs. babyface dynamic worked. Crowd was AJ-heavy at the start, but organically it split by the final stretch. AJ was presented as the veteran ace, coming off his loss last week. He was not dominant, not lucky — inevitable. The finish reinforced experience and ring IQ.

Pacing was excellent. Match never lost the audience. Overall, mission accomplished. Showcase match for both men that created buzz without sacrificing standings logic.


A highlight video package airs:
  • Clips from Ignition 200 roll: The Death Busters defeat The Hart Foundation to capture the WSW World Tag Team Championships.
  • We see the return of Karl Anderson and Doc Gallows declaring they were coming for the Death Busters.
  • Highlights of last week’s attack by the Death Busters backstage.
This segways to a sit down interview from Earlier Today.

The setting is refined and quiet — leather chairs, low lighting, no distractions. Chael Sonnen sat across from Karl Anderson and Doc Gallows. The mood is serious.

Chael Sonnen: Gentlemen, I appreciate you taking the time to join me. I’m going to be direct. In this business, everything eventually comes back to championships. Why do the World Tag Team Titles still matter to you?

Karl Anderson: Because the more this business changes… the more it stays the same.

Doc Gallows: New faces. New slogans. Same truth. It’s always been about the belts.

Karl Anderson: We didn’t get into this to chase trends. We got into this to win gold.

Chael Sonnen: In the history of WSW, only three teams have ever won the World Tag Team Championships twice. You, The Young Bucks, and the Death Busters. That's a helluva list.

Doc Gallows: That's not a coincidence. All three of those teams are elite. The best of the best.

Karl Anderson: The big man is right. I'll tell you this though. One thing stands out to me on that list. US. Chael, we were pioneers of the tag team wrestling renaissance. Before it was fashionable. Before it was the main event. When tag team wrestling had to be dragged back into relevance...we were the ones to stand on the front line!

Chael Sonnen: I'm not going to challenge that point. The Death Busters say this is their world now. Give me your gut reaction when you hear that.

Doc Gallows: It makes me sick to my freakin' stomach.

Karl Anderson: Let’s draw a line in the sand If this is their world...then they’re just boys playing in the sandbox we built. You want to call yourselves the standard? Then put the belts on the line. September 21st...Grand Prix Finals for the World Tag Team Championships. Let's find out who really runs this place.

Chael Sonnen: I want to go back to a point you made a moment ago. There was a time in this business where tag team wrestling was on life support. In Japan, you helped revive it. Here in America, the Death Busters did the same. What happens when the two pillars of that revival collide?

Karl Anderson: Then it stops being talk.

Doc Gallows: You can say a lot of things about us. We'll be the first to tell you, we aren't nice guys. We don't do nice things. But, we've always been about business. If we want something -- we look you in the eye, call our shot, and fight for it. None of this attack from behind bullshit.

Karl Anderson: The Death Busters changed tag team wrestling in America. We changed it everywhere else...and we did it FIRST. Now it's time to man up. Put the belts on the line. Let's fight for them. And let's find out who the best team in the world really is.

Chael Sonnen: (nods)Message received.
The camera lingers on Gallows and Anderson — calm, composed, and dangerous.


A promo aired, promoting Ignition's move to Tuesday nights.

The best wrestling television show is moving to a new night.

Starting October 1st… WSW Ignition moves to Tuesday nights!

A new night. A new fight.

Only on the Paramount Network.


As Ignition returns from commercial, the camera snaps on abruptly backstage. No polish. No production sheen. The Death Busters stood shoulder to shoulder, the WSW World Tag Team Championships draped over their shoulders. The shot was tight. Intimate. Dangerous.

They stared directly into the lens.

Dawson: Gallows and Anderson are right about one thing. This IS historic.

Wilder: When people talk about modern tag team wrestling...when they talk about who carried it when it mattered...our names are right there!

Dawson:
And so are yours...

That line lingered -- then his tone hardened

The difference?

He slapped the title belt.

We perfected it.

Wilder:

We’re not just great. We’re not just elite.

He leaned in closer to the camera.

We are the main event.

Dawson took over again:

From day one, we walked into WSW and changed the game. Name them.

Wilder rattled them off.

The Lucha Brothers...The Hart Foundation...

Dawson smirked.

Hell — we beat the Young Bucks so bad they ran to Japan just so they wouldn’t have to be on the same continent as us.

Wilder shook his head:

So if you want a shot?

You got it.

Dawson stepped forward, eyes burning.

September 21st is going to be historic.

He lifted the title up.

Because it’ll be the day Gallows and Anderson finally get put to pasture!

When Black Arrow aims...We don't miss!

Top Guys...OUT!


The screen faded to black. Soon, slow, deliberate shots of the Cow Palace fill the screen — the exterior at dawn, the iconic roofline, empty seats bathed in shadow. Grainy footage dissolves in: black-and-white wrestling clips, yellowed posters, timeworn ticket stubs. Mauro Ranallo's voice narrates:

In professional wrestling… there are arenas.

And then there are cathedrals.

Old footage rolls — packed crowds, flashing cameras, wrestlers brawling beneath hot lights.

For generations, the Cow Palace has stood as one of the most historic venues in this sport.

World Championships defended.

Legacies cemented.

Careers made in a single night.

The footage sharpens — a chaotic ring filled with bodies flying over the top rope.

But when you think of the Cow Palace…

One match comes to mind.

The music drops.

The Battle Royal.

Vintage footage floods the screen — wrestlers being dumped to the floor, referees scrambling. Crackling, old announcer audio cuts in.

He’s over! He’s over the top rope! This place has come unglued!

Ranallo's narration continued:

Launched in 1967 by legendary promoter Roy Shire, the Cow Palace Battle Royal became the crown jewel of Northern California wrestling.

A graphic flashes: 1967 – NWA San Francisco

An annual, high-stakes, eighteen-man war.

Where survival mattered more than style.

And one night could change everything.

The music begins to build.

Modern footage cuts in — Jungle Boy, Sammy Guevara, Myron Reed, Alexander Hammerstone are highlighted.

Now… that tradition is reborn.

The Cow Palace logo slams onto the screen.

On September 21st…

World Series Wrestling proudly revives the Cow Palace Battle Royal.

The prize...

$100,000
Rapid-fire shots of WSW action are shown.

Eighteen competitors. One winner.

For some...it will be opportunity.

For others...a career-defining moment.

Grand Prix Finals.

Live on Netflix.

September 21.

GP.jpg


Ahead of the main event, the camera cuts to the announce desk, positioned on-stage, camera-left. They run down the upcoming cards, and graphics illustrate their words.

Mauro Ranallo: How exciting is that! At Grand Prix Finals, it is the official return of one of professional wrestling’s most storied traditions — the Cow Palace Battle Royal!

Chael Sonnen: September 21st is loading up, Mauro. In addition to the Cow Palace Battle Royal, we will also see Women’s World Championship: Tessa Blanchard versus Deonna Purrazzo. World Tag Team Titles: Death Busters versus Karl Anderson and Doc Gallows. And, of course, the Finals of the Grand Prix.

Mauro Ranallo:

And next week, Ignition rolls on — Grand Prix Night Five from Boston, Massachusetts.

Mauro ran down the card with urgency:

A Block: Kenny Omega vs. AJ Styles.
A Block: Will Ospreay vs. Austin Aries.
A Block: Ricochet vs. Bandido.
B Block: Kota Ibushi vs. Claudio Castagnoli.
B Block: Cody vs. Adam Cole

Chael leans forward and said:

But tonight… the A Block could be decided right now.

Ranallo agreed:

The only two undefeated men in the tournament. Will Ospreay. Kenny Omega. The winner punches his ticket to the Grand Prix Finals — right now.



Match Five - A Block: "The Aerial Assassin" Will Ospreay (3-0; 6 Points) vs. WSW World Champion "The Best Bout Machine" Kenny Omega (3-0; 6 Points)
The main event of Ignition was an A Block match between Will Ospreay and Kenny Omega.



The Sears Centre ERUPTED.


Ospreay stepped on-stage, emotion written all over his face. He didn't pose. He didn't preen. He just looked out — absorbing it.


Mauro Ranallo:
Will Ospreay may be wrestling the best he ever has in his life right now.

Chael Sonnen: But more than that — he’s been honest. Raw. Vulnerable. And these people? They’ve chosen to go on that ride with him.

Ospreay slapped the barricade, nodded, and stepped into the ring.

Mauro Ranallo said:

Last week he beat AJ Styles. Tonight… it’s the top of the mountain.

Pyro EXPLODED!

The reaction for the World Champion was thunderous.


Omega emerged, calm, focused, championship gold around his waist.


Mauro Ranallo:
Kenny Omega calls himself the greatest tournament wrestler alive, and truth be told -- that's not arrogance, that's resume. He is the first non-Japanese wrestler to ever win the G1 Climax. And tonight, he wants to become the first reigning World Champion to win the WSW Grand Prix.

Omega entered the ring and removed the title.

For just a second — Ospreay’s eyes widen as he glanced at the World Championship.

Not envy.

Purpose.

At the bell, the crowd rose and cheered before the two men even touched.

They locked up, circling the ring, neither willing to concede an inch. A series of counters and transitions followed — wrist control, headlocks, escapes — until they broke clean.


Omega gained the first edge, muscling Ospreay to the mat. Ospreay fought to his feet and kipped up after a shoulder block.

Ospreay fired up and shouted:

I’m here all night, bruv! I ain’t going nowhere!

The pace instantly quickened. Omega attempted to pop off a hurricanrana, but Ospreay flipped to his feet and answered with one of his own, sending Omega to the floor.


Ospreay followed with a pescado.

Looking to keep the pace moving, Ospreay vaulted to the top for a springboard, but Omega blocked it mid-motion and shoved him backwards!

Ospreay tumbled through the air and CRASHED into the barricade!

He grabbed at this back. Ospreay gritted his teeth and made it back into the ring at the count of 8.

Omega smelled blood and took control, targeting Ospreay’s back with sharp forearms. He connected with the You Can’t Escape.

1…

2…

Ospreay kicked out.

Omega followed with a hip toss into a spine punt, then locked in a back-focused submission. Ospreay fought to his feet and elbowed free, but Omega cut him off with a single-knee backbreaker.

Another cover.

1…


2…


Ospreay kicked out again.

Justin Roberts

Five minutes have expired. Fifteen minutes remain.

Omega continued attacking the back — another hip toss attempt was countered into a cobra twist by Ospreay, but Omega powered out. He charged, only to be flapjacked onto the top rope by Ospreay.

Ospreay connected with a big boot, then countered a suplex attempt with a Stundog Millionaire.

Ospreay hit a springboard corkscrew kick, followed by a springboard forearm.

1…


2…


Omega kicked out!

Omega rolled to the apron to pause Ospreay's momentum. Ospreay followed though and chopped him hard. Omega answered with one of his own, but Ospreay fired a superkick. In a flash, Ospreay stuck again...




OSCUTTER ON THE APRON!






The crowd roared.


Omega went to the floor, and Ospreay went back inside. He fired up the crowd and hit the ropes. What followed was incredible:

  • Ospreay went for the Sasuke Special
  • Omega caught him on the floor and went for a Snap Dragon on the ramp.
  • Ospreay flipped out and landed on his feet.
  • Ospreay then charged at Omega, only to be monkey-flipped toward the ring.
  • Ospreay threaded the ropes, slipped into the ring, and launched himself with a Sasuke Special!

HE CONNECTED!

Mauro Ranallo exclaimed:

Are you freaking kidding me?!

The Sears Centre lost its mind.

HOLY SHIT! HOLY SHIT! HOLY SHIT!

Back inside, Ospreay attempted another Oscutter — Omega blocked and shoved him away. Ospreay turned to attack again, but Omega BLASTED him with a V-Trigger. Omega followed with a Poison Rana and a fisherman neckbreaker.

COVER!

1…



2…




Ospreay kicked out!


Omega went for another V-Trigger — Ospreay intercepted with a corkscrew kick!


Ospreay hit the Robinson Special!


1…






2…





Omega kicked out!


Ospreay clutched his back, pounding the mat to fire himself up. The crowd responded in kind. He charged for the Hidden Blade — Omega ducked!


V-TRIGGER!



V-TRIGGER!


Omega pointed the finger guns and went for the kill...




Ospreay collapsed through the ropes to the floor.


Mauro Ranallo:

Is that ring awareness… or sheer survival instinct?

Justin Roberts

Ten minutes have expired. Ten minutes remain.


Omega went to a knee in the center of the ring. He rhymical beat the canvas....


He rose...


He hit the ropes...


Rise of the Terminator!


Omega threw Ospreay back inside and lifted him for the One Winged Angel!




Ospreay countered with a poison hurricanrana!






Ospreay hit an Oscutter.


1…







2………………








KICK OUT!


The crowd cheered!

Justin Roberts

Fifteen minutes have expired. Five minutes remain.

Ospreay climbed the ropes, wincing in pain. He was slower, his back throbbing. As he positioned himself on the top, Ospreay slapped himself in the face to fire himself up. Omega joined him. He climbed to the middle rope...and then the top.

BOTH MEN WERE ON THE TOP ROPE!

They traded strikes -- hammering short, stiff forearms into each other's skull!

Everyone in the Sears Centre was standing:

PLEASE DON'T DIE! PLEASE DON'T DIE!

Omega went for broke...


He leapt up.....






AVALANCHE HURRICANRANA!









NO!









Ospreay blocked it and powered Omega up!















AVALANCHE LIGERBOMB!













THE RING SHOOK ON IMPACT! THE WORLD CHAMPION WAS FOLDED IN HALF!


1…














2………………














OMEGA KICKED OUT!


Both men were down.


Ospreay couldn't believe it! He flopped to his back, chest heaving!


Justin Roberts:

Sixty seconds remaining!

The two men met on their knees and traded forearms. The impact was brutal and rocked both men's heads, but they just kept fired away.

They went forehead to forehead and rose to their feet -- seemingly leaning on each other for balance.








OSPREAY THREW A HEADBUTT!




OMEGA WITH A HEADBUTT!





OSPREAY WITH A THUNDEROUS HEADBUTT!

Ospreay bellowed a primal roar and unleashed a furious strike combination, rocking the World Champion. He went for the Hidden Blade — Omega kicked the arm at the last second to avoid it!



















OMEGA HIT A STRAIGHT JACKET GERMAN SUPLEX!






BRIDGE!


1…














2………………












KICK OUT!


Justin Roberts

Thirty seconds remain.

Omega rose!










V-TRIGGER



















ANOTHER V-TRIGGER!



















Omega signaled for the end!













OSPREAY WAS LEANING IN THE ROPES ON HIS KNEES! HIS EYES WERE GLAZED OVER!






















OMEGA POINTED THE FINGER GUN AND CHARGED!

































OSPREAY EXPLODED UP AT THE LAST SECOND!























HIDDEN BLADE!
























BOTH MEN COLLAPSED!























Justin Roberts:

Ten seconds!

THEY WERE MOTIONLESS!


7…








6…









5…









Ospreay saw everything in front of him! He crawled to the fallen Omega.


4…









3…













2…








OSPREAY THREW HIS ARM OVER OMEGA'S CHEST!















1........................................................................











THE BELL RINGS!

Draw (20:00)

Kenny Omega (3-0-1; 7 Points) | Will Ospreay (3-0-1; 7 Points)

Justin Roberts:

Ladies and gentlemen, the time limit has expired. This match is a draw!

The crowd sat stunned for a moment, and some boos were heard.

Both men received one point.

The announcers held firm.

Mauro Ranallo: Mama Mia...what a match! That wasn't a draw, it was a declaration! The time limit has expired. Omega and Ospreay went wire to wire. Both will receive one point.

Chael Sonnen: The A Block is still wide open too!


Ospreay flopped to his back, his chest heaved.

Slowly, the crowd stood and applauded the effort. Some chants of "Five More Minutes" could be heard.

Slowly, the two men drug themselves to opposite corners.

Ospreay sat with his head resting on the bottom turnbuckle. Tears could be seen in his eyes — pain, frustration, heartbreak.

Omega sat opposite him, stunned — breathing heavily, eyes locked on Ospreay.

Mauro Ranallo described the scene:

Tonight, in Chicago, the future stood toe-to-toe with the standard -- and neither man blinked!

The final shot lingered. The two men remained tied atop the A Block with 7 points. But everyone knew...

The first step of a long waltz.

This match absolutely delivered on its core objective: establishing Ospreay as a true peer to the World Champion without undercutting Omega’s aura, and the time-limit draw felt earned rather than convenient. The crowd's reaction to the draw was expected, but it's necessary to drive home that it matters and is real. American audiences have been conditioned to not recognize them.

Omega’s methodical back work gave the match structure and realism, while Ospreay’s explosive bursts and emotional selling made every comeback feel desperate and organic.

The final two minutes were outstanding, with the time calls enhancing urgency and the Hidden Blade landing as a genuine “we almost had history” moment.

Crowd investment was sky-high throughout, and the post-match visual of mutual recognition clearly positioned this as the beginning of a long-term, top-of-the-card rivalry rather than a one-off showcase.

Results


No.
Result
Stipulation
Time
1​
Adam Cole def. Kota Ibushi​
B Block - Singles match​
14:36​
2​
Ricochet def. Austin Aries​
A Block - Singles match​
9:46​
3​
Claudio Castagnoli def. Bobby Lashley​
B Block - Singles match​
6:45​
4​
AJ Styles def. Bandido​
A Block - Singles match​
13:00​
5​
Kenny Omega vs. Will Ospreay ended in a time limit draw​
A Block - Singles match​
20:00​

Grand Prix Standings

A Block
B Block
Kenny Omega (3-0-1 | 7 Points)​
Kota Ibushi (3-1 | 6 Points)​
Will Ospreay (3-0-1 | 7 Points)​
Cody (3-1 | 6 Points)​
Ricochet (2-2 | 4 Points)​
Adam Cole (2-2 | 4 Points)​
AJ Styles (2-2 | 4 Points)​
Claudio Castagnoli (1-3 | 2 Points)​
Bandido (1-3 | 2 Points)​
Bobby Lashley (1-3 | 2 Points)​
Austin Aries (0-4 | 0 Points)​
Jon Moxley (OUT due to injury) (2-0 | 4 Points)​

Grand Prix Finals

Grand Prix Finals
GP.jpg
Saturday, September 21: Streaming LIVE on Netflix
Grand Prix Finals Match​
WSW Women's World Championship: Tessa Blanchard (c) vs. Deonna Purrazzo​
WSW World Tag Team Championships: The Death Busters (c) vs. Karl Anderson & Doc Gallows​
$100,000 Cow Palace Battle Royal​





























 

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jdswain111

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I love Tessa as champion Nixon Newell was so brave I smell a babyface turn
 

deltablues

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WSW OverDrive (Episode 4)
5529c357-aedf-4b3b-b9fb-0d2b07b3c6ef.png
Promotion: World Series Wrestling
Date: September 7, 2019
City: Hoffman Estates, IL
Venue: Sears Centre

The 9/7 episode of WSW OverDrive opened with the show’s signature intro before cutting to Mike Tenay inside the WSW Control Center.

Welcome, everyone, to another exciting week of WSW OverDrive, right here on YouTube.

We are still feeling the aftereffects of an explosive Night Four of the 2019 Grand Prix. Momentum is shifting, pressure is mounting, and now everything leads to next Thursday on Ignition: Grand Prix Night Five, where the block winners will be decided. Over the course of this program, we’ll break down exactly what you need to know — the scenarios, the stakes, and the math that will determine who advances.

Because make no mistake about it — all roads lead to the Grand Prix Finals, live on September 21st, from the Bay Area and the legendary Cow Palace.

Here tonight on OverDrive, the World Tag Team Champions, The Death Busters, are in action. Mercedes Martinez sits down for an exclusive interview with Jenn Decker. We’ll have exclusive insight from both the A Block and B Block competitors as the tournament reaches its most critical point. And in our main event, rising stars collide as Sammy Guevara and Myron Reed take on Jungle Boy and Lee Johnson.

But we begin tonight with a match that has been brewing for weeks.

LFI — RUSH and Dragon Lee — a team that has struck fear across the globe, continues to make waves here in WSW. In recent weeks, we’ve seen them scouting potential new members, expanding their influence — but tonight is about something far more direct.

Tonight, they seek to remind everyone why LFI is one of the most feared teams in professional wrestling, as they go one-on-one with The Von Erichs.

Let’s get things started.


Match One: LFI vs. The Von Erichs

The first match of OverDrive was a tag team contest between LFI (RUSH and Dragon Lee) and The Von Erichs (Ross and Marshall Von Erich). LFI entered first, exuding confidence and swagger -- it radiated cool and the crowd couldn't help but react to it. The Von Erichs followed to a respectable response.

Before the Von Erichs could even settle into the ring, LFI attacked — and the match exploded into a brawl.

The fight spilled to the floor immediately. Marshall Von Erich rocked Dragon Lee with a barefoot running boot, while RUSH violently hurled Ross Von Erich into the guardrail again and again, finishing by choking him with a camera cable as the official struggled to restore order.

Marshall answered back, MOWING DOWN RUSH with a massive Pounce on the floor that sent him crashing into the barricade.

Once the bell finally brought order, Marshall and RUSH squared off — two bulls trading heavy shots. Dragon Lee cracked Marshall with a sharp gamengiri from the apron as Marshall ran the ropes. This provided an opening for RUSH to launch Marshall with a thunderous overhead belly-to-belly suplex. He then dropped into a defiant tranquilo pose.

LFI isolated Ross Von Erich, cutting the ring in half and grinding him down. When Ross finally created separation, RUSH yanked Marshall off the apron —preventing the tag. This drew boos, and it opened the door for Dragon Lee to destroy Ross with a shotgun dropkick.

Ross tumbled out to the floor, and Dragon Lee teased a dive to the floor onto both Von Erich brothers, winding up the crowd. He hit the ropes, and then stopped cold and fliped the crowd off, drawing a chorus of boos.

The Von Erichs rallied. Marshall stormed in on a hot tag, flattening both men with powerslams and following up with crisp dropkicks that showcased his explosiveness.

The Von Erichs nearly stole it when Marshall catapulted Dragon Lee into Ross, who slingshotted himself over the ropes and connected with a diving forearm strike for a close near fall.

The finish was fast and violent.

Dragon Lee planted Ross with a sudden poison rana, then tagged out. RUSH blastsed Marshall off the apron with a running boot, and Dragon Lee followed by launching himself with a breathtaking cannonball tope suicida into Marshall on the floor.

Back inside the ring, RUSH ducked an enziguri from Ross and heaved him into the turnbuckles with a release German suplex. RUSH then charged in with the Bull’s Horns to put the match away.

LFI (8:08)

This was an excellent tone-setter and the right kind of controlled chaos for an OverDrive opener. LFI came off like stars — Dragon Lee’s swagger and RUSH’s raw violence kept the crowd engaged even as they leaned toward cheering them, and the flip-off tease instead of the dive was a smart heat check. The Von Erichs showed real fire and physicality, especially Marshall, whose power spots and dropkicks stood out, but their transitions between offense and defense are still a half-beat slow at times. Overall, LFI feel fully formed and dangerous, while the Von Erichs are clearly improving but still need reps to tighten pacing and ring awareness.


The broadcast returned to Mike Tenay inside the Control Center, as updated A Block standings appeared on screen.

WSW_A_Block_Results_Night_Four.jpeg

The entire wrestling world is still buzzing about what we witnessed in the main event of Ignition.

For the first time ever in World Series Wrestling, the WSW World Champion Kenny Omega stood across the ring from Will Ospreay — and for twenty minutes, neither man gave an inch. They went to a time-limit draw, and now the stakes could not be higher as we head into Night Five.

Omega and Ospreay sit deadlocked atop the A Block with identical records — three wins, no losses, one draw — seven points apiece.

This Thursday night, Will Ospreay faces one of the craftiest veterans in the sport, Austin Aries — a man desperate to earn his first victory in this year’s Grand Prix.

And in a rematch of one of the most celebrated matches in WSW history from Seize the Day, the World Champion Kenny Omega goes one-on-one with the Ace of WSW, AJ Styles.

The math is unforgiving.

Omega and Ospreay are the only two men who can win the A Block. One must win — and the other must lose.

And if they remain tied when the night ends… World Series Wrestling will go to its official tiebreaker scenarios to determine who advances to the Grand Prix Finals.

There is no safety net.


We then cut to exclusive interviews from After Ignition.

The camera cut to Will Ospreay seated alone in the locker room. A towel was draped over his head, his gear still on, a half-empty water bottle clenched in his hand. He looked exhausted — but focused.

Twenty minutes with Kenny Omega doesn’t leave you feeling proud.

It leaves you feeling unsatisfied.

I’ve replayed it in my head a hundred times already — every second, every mistake, every moment where I was this close. I’ve already heard some people back here calling it a classic, patting me on the back.

I ain’t got time for that.

I came here for two points — and I didn’t get them.

But I got one.

Kenny… you are the best, bruv. I respect you. But you need to understand something. You’re standing where I want to be. You’re holding the belt I want to hold.

And that day is coming. Soon.

Now the math is simple. I know exactly what I need. I don’t need help. I don’t need favors.

I need one more win. That’s it.

Thursday night, I’m not chasing history.

I’m taking it.


The scene shifted to another exclusive interview. Kenny Omega sat on a road case, still in full gear. The WSW World Championship rested across his lap. He stared at it for a moment before looking into the camera.

In life, there are moments where you know something is special… you just don’t fully realize it because you’re living inside it.

That’s what tonight feels like to me.

I’ll be honest — I didn’t know exactly what to expect from Will Ospreay. I knew he was good. Everyone knows he’s good.

But he’s not just good.

He’s damn good.

He’s great.

The first time we locked up, I felt it. Immediately. This wasn’t about proving anything — this was two people pushing themselves as far as they possibly could.

And that’s what this championship demands.

This belt… and this Grand Prix… they aren’t about moments. They’re about responsibility. About standing here every night and being ready when someone like Will Ospreay steps across from you and says, this is my time.

Tonight didn’t give us a winner.

But it showed me something.

The future isn’t coming.

It’s already here.

So now it comes to this.

Next week. Boston.

The Best Bout Machine and the Ace of WSW — AJ Styles.

AJ… I’m not obtuse. I know I’m holding something you want. Something you feel was taken from you. (Omega glanced down at the World Title for a moment before looking back into the camera).

And I also know that beating you gets me the two points I need.

I know you’ve been waiting for this. Ever since that night in Long Island back in April.

So let me be clear.

Next week ends one way.

You eat the knee.

Then it’s lights out.

That’s my path to the Finals.

Goodbye.

(Kenny held up the finger gun and looked at coyly. He paused.)

Smooch.

Goodnight.

Bang.


OverDrive continued with Mike Tenay in the Control Center.

Still to come tonight on OverDrive, our main event — Sammy Guevara and Myron Reed collide with Jungle Boy and Lee Johnson — but right now, we turn our attention to the World Tag Team Champions.

The Death Busters have made it very clear what they stand for. They don’t care about popularity. They don’t care about style points. They care about dominance.

And looming large on the horizon at the Grand Prix Finals are Doc Gallows and Karl Anderson. Two of the most dangerous tag team competitors in the world.

Tonight is not about championships.

Tonight is about a message.


Match Two: Non-Title Match - John Silver & Alex Reynolds vs. WSW World Tag Team Champions The Death Busters

The second match of OverDrive was a non-title tag team match between Alex Reynolds & John Silver and WSW World Tag Team Champions The Death Busters (Dawson and Wilder). Silver and Reynolds were already in the ring as the champions made their entrance.

The Death Busters wasted no time. Old-school, unapologetic heels, they immediately zeroed in on Alex Reynolds, dismantling him with ruthless efficiency. Dawson mockingly chanted “Defense! Defense!” like it was a basketball game as the champions mauled Reynolds in their corner.

Reynolds was hurled into the corner and John Silver tagged in. Silver surprised everyone, firing off a brief flurry of quick strikes that momentarily caught the champions off guard — until Dawson cut him in half with a brutal lariat.

The Death Busters took full control. They planted both men with stereo powerslams, casually tapped Silver and Reynolds together like clinking beer bottles before finishing their work.

Fall of the Axe connected on John Silver, and that was all she wrote.

The Death Busters (2:53)

This was exactly the squash it needed to be — fast, cruel, and efficient. The Death Busters came off like champions who don’t need time or drama to hurt people, and Dawson’s mocking “Defense” chant gave them real personality heat. Silver’s brief burst of offense was the right tease before being shut down hard, reinforcing the gap between contenders and champions. Crowd reaction skewed toward boos in the right way, and the champions felt dangerous heading into Grand Prix Finals without overexposure.

We also like Alex Reynolds and John Silver. They are popular on the indies, and Silver -- in particular -- has good charisma.


Back inside the Control Center, Mike Tenay broke down the B Block.

WSW_B_Block_Results_Night_Four.jpeg

If the A Block has been defined by excellence, the B Block has been defined by chaos.

Kota Ibushi and Cody sit atop the block with six points apiece — but Ibushi holds the all-important head-to-head tiebreaker. For Cody to advance, he must win on Thursday night — and he must see Ibushi lose.

And then there is the wildcard.

Adam Cole.

After a shocking 0-2 start, the captain of Black Arrow clawed his way back into contention with back-to-back victories by any means necessary. This Thursday, Cole faces Cody — and should Cole win, he reaches six points and holds the tiebreakers over both men.

Ibushi, however, still controls his destiny.

His path is simple — win, and he is in the Grand Prix Finals.

But standing in his way is Claudio Castagnoli, in a rematch of one of the most brutal matches we have ever witnessed in World Series Wrestling — a match that ended with Kota Ibushi leaving the arena on a stretcher.

There is no margin for error.


Exclusive interviews from After Ignition air.

Kota Ibushi sat on the floor of a quiet backstage hallway. He leaned on the wall, still wearing his trucks with a Golden Triangle t-shirt on. He speaks Japanese with English subtitles.

今夜……その瞬間は、とても近かった。

(Tonight… the moment was close.)

本当に、すぐそこにあった。

(So close.)

でも……まだ遠かった。

(And yet… it was far away.)

俺は、失敗した。

(I failed.)

でも、失敗は戦いの終わりじゃない。

(But failure does not mean the war is over.)

すべては、来週で決まる。

(Everything comes down to next week.)

最初にクラウディオ・カスタニョーリと闘った時、俺は感情で闘っていた。

(The first time I faced Claudio Castagnoli, I fought with emotion.)

怒りと、悔しさで。

(With anger. With bitterness.)

その感情が、判断を曇らせた。

(Those feelings clouded my judgment.)

戦略も、見えなくなっていた。

(They clouded my strategy.)

だから……俺は負けた。

(And because of that… I lost.)

救急車で、会場を後にした。

(I left in an ambulance.)

来週は、違う。

(Next week will be different.)

来週は、感情の試合じゃない。

(Next week is not about emotion.)

来週は……エスカレーションだ。

(Next week is about escalation.)

長い間、俺は“世界を渡る戦士”だった。

(For many years, I have been a world warrior.)

WSWで、俺は居場所を見つけた。

(In World Series Wrestling, I found a home.)

今回は……前に立ちたい。

(This time… I want to walk in front.)

来週、俺は“偉大さへの扉”をくぐる。

(Next week, I step through the door to greatness.)

そして、プロレスの神々に告げる。

(And I let the wrestling gods know…)

Ibushi looked directly in the camera and spoke in English:

I am here.


Next up, was an exclusive interview with Adam Cole. He paced in his locker room, still in his gear, sweat dripping down his face. He stopped, looked directly into the lens, and smirked.

Boom.

I told you.

I told you.

I TOLD YOU.

I told you this was going to happen — and yet somehow, nobody wanted to believe me. Everybody seemed to take a little bit of pride in my 0-2 start.

I tried to tell you to believe in Adam Cole.

Because I am inevitable.

Kota Ibushi walked into tonight with a chance to close out the B Block.

And instead?

I just hit a walk-off home run.

This thing is going to extra innings.

Next week… Night Five.

Cody.

You took the Intercontinental Championship from me.

Next week, I’m taking something from you.

I’m taking those two points.

I’m punching my ticket to the Grand Prix Finals.

And I’m going to break the hearts of everyone who believes in you.

Believe in Adam Cole.

Bay Bay.


A promo aired for Grand Prix Finals.

Saturday, September 21… the 2019 Grand Prix reaches its climax.

From the legendary Cow Palace, the very best in the world collide as the Grand Prix Finals take center stage.

Who will punch their ticket to November Reign?

Grand Prix Finals — streaming live, globally, on Netflix.


Back in the Control Center, Mike Tenay addressed the audience.

The Women’s Division in World Series Wrestling continues to evolve, and tonight we spotlight a competitor at a critical point in her journey.

Nixon Newell has been given expectations — not encouragement, not praise — expectations. On Ignition, Women's World Champion Tessa Blanchard made it clear: winning is no longer optional.

Tonight, Newell stands alone. No Diamond. No safety net.

Just an opportunity.


Match Three: Shanna vs. Nixon Newell

The third match of OverDrive was a singles match between Shanna and Nixon Newell. Newell made her entrance alone. The commentary duo of Goldenboy and Veda Scott noted that Tessa Blanchard and Tenille Dashwood had departed of a business trip, and Blanchard was very blunt when addressing Newell on Ignition.

Newell started fast and purposeful, stalking forward with the posture of a Muay Thai striker and firing sharp kicks early. Shanna slipped one and countered with a slick monkey flip into a quick pin attempt for two, then followed immediately with a sunset flip for another close two-count.

Shanna snapped off a bicycle kick that drove Newell into the corner, then charged for double knees — but Newell sidestepped and Shanna crashed hard into the turnbuckles. Newell capitalized with a neckbreaker, then drilled a Falcon Arrow for a near fall.

Shanna rolled to the floor to regroup, but Newell pursued with a slingshot dropkick through the ropes!. On the floor, Newell sent Shanna spine-first into the steel steps.

Back inside, Shanna went for a lariat — Newell ducked, fired a sharp spin kick to the gut, then deliberately hooked the toe of her boot under Shanna’s chin…

…and DETONATED a vicious roundhouse kick that dropped her instantly.

Newell wasted no time, charging in with the Shiniest Wizard to put it away.

Nixon Newell (3:01)

This was a sharp, efficient showcase that accomplished exactly what it needed to. Newell’s striking offense stood out immediately and the roundhouse kick spot felt brutal and definitive, giving her a clear signature moment.

Shanna is not under contract, but we've brought her in a couple times and think she has potential. Shanna was the right opponent — quick enough to test Newell early, but not so competitive that the finish felt diluted. Crowd responded decent to Newell, and she continues to come across as a credible threat with an edge rather than just another skilled wrestler.




One On One with Jenn Decker aired next.

Inside a quiet, warmly lit interview area, Jenn Decker sat across from Mercedes Martinez, who was relaxed but intense, eyes focused.

Jenn Decker: Welcome to One On One here on OverDrive. I'm Jenn Decker, and I'm so excited to be joined today by the newest member of the WSW women's division, Mercedes Martinez. Mercedes, you’ve been all over the world for nearly two decades. Japan, the independents, everywhere. When people talk about you now, they call this moment a breakthrough — but I’m curious. When did this really start for you?

Mercedes Martinez: Honestly? It started when basketball ended. I played basketball from the time I was old enough to walk and earned a scholarship to play in college. I got hurt, and everything I thought my life was going to be… it just stopped. I came to wrestling thinking I’d train a little, learn the business, and then I'd end up on TV. Man, was I wrong about that timeline (laughs).

What I didn't expect would happen was that I would fall in love with wrestling.

When I walked through that curtain the first time, I heard the people. I felt the contact. The chaos. The beauty of violence.

And I found myself.

Every bit of excitement and fulfillment that basketball gave me, I felt in wrestling.

Jenn Decker: You’ve said before that wrestling helped you find your voice. What do you mean by that?

Mercedes Martinez: Yeah. Because this business doesn’t let you hide. You put yourself out there — everything you are — and the world decides how they feel about it. Somewhere along the way, that gave me peace. I became comfortable in my own skin.

But I’d be lying if I said it was easy.

I’d look at my phone. I’d wait for a call from the big time.

It never came.

Jenn Decker: That kind of rejection can break people.

Mercedes Martinez: It can make you think you’re undesirable. Like you missed your chance.

But rejection doesn’t mean no forever. It just means not yet.

Nineteen years went by, and I thought my moment was gone.

Then WSW called.

Jenn Decker: What did that moment mean to you?

Mercedes Martinez: Validation.

That the journey was worth it.

But don’t get it twisted — I didn’t come here for a victory lap.

I’m a nineteen-year veteran. I’m not fancy. I’m an alley cat. I’m the paint where the paint isn’t supposed to be.

I’m here to fight.

I want the best.

And I’m coming for the women’s division — to punch it square in the teeth.

Decker nodded, clearly affected, as Martinez stared forward with quiet intensity.


A promo aired, promoting Ignition's move to Tuesday nights.

The best wrestling television show is moving to a new night.

Starting October 1st… WSW Ignition moves to Tuesday nights!

A new night. A new fight.

Only on the Paramount Network.


Back inside the Control Center with Mike Tenay.

Our main event is moments away, and it is rooted in controversy.

Last week, Sammy Guevara and Myron Reed stole a victory in a trios match — and tonight, Jungle Boy demanded answers. Not with words, but with a fight.

This is about pride. This is about momentum. And for these four competitors, it is about proving exactly who belongs on the biggest stages in World Series Wrestling.

Let’s head back to the ring.


Match Four: Jungle Boy and Lee Johnson vs. "The Best Ever" Sammy Guevara and "Hot Fire" Myron Reed

The fourth match of OverDrive was a tag team match with Jungle Boy & Lee Johnson teaming up again Sammy Guevara and Myron Reed. The crowd made its feelings immediately -- Jungle Boy was cheered and Sammy Guevara was booed.

Jungle Boy demanded that Guevara start. Guevara smirked and circled around with Jungle Boy. Before the two could make contact, Guevara backed off and tagged out to Reed instead -- drawing more jeers.

The pace was frantic early, with Jungle Boy outwrestling Reed and Johnson adding momentum. Guevara entered with authority. The first thing he did was sprint across the ring and blast Jungle Boy off the apron. The team of Guevara and Reed were able to work over Johnson. Johnson rallied back with a dropkick to both men and a clothesline to send both over the top to the floor.

Johnson’s attempted tope was cut off by a double leaping knee strike. Johnson splatted on the floor. Guevara and Reed trash talked fans in the front row, but their gloating was cut short as Jungle Boy wiped them both out with a crowd-pleasing tope con hilo!

Back in the ring, Guevara and Jungle Boy finally collided, trading rapid sequences. Jungle Boy scored a cazadora arm drag, leading to a fast-paced rope running sequence that saw Guevara backflip over a charging Jungle Boy. Guevara hit a superkick, leg sweep, and a standing shooting star press for a 2 count!

Guevara hoisted Jungle Boy onto his shoulders and went for the Go To Hell (GTH), but Jungle Boy countered with a DDT and both men tagged out.

Reed’s speed shined. He hit a springboard cutter and the Louisville Slugger (springboard spinning forearm strike) for a near fall. Guevara entered illegally to attempt a double team, but Johnson caught Guevara with a superkick and hit a Finlay Roll on Reed to tag Jungle Boy!

Jungle Boy shot Reed into the ropes, and Guevara blind tagged in. Jungle Boy took down Reed with an inverted slam, but Guevara snuck in from behind with a tight roll up!

Jungle Boy kicked out at 2 though!

The two then engaged in a fast paced sequence of pin attempts -- each yielding counts of 1 and 2, until Guevara got a tight schoolboy and hooked a handful of trunks to steal the 3 yet again!

Sammy Guevara and Myron Reed (9:22)

After the match, Guevara and Reed bailed from the ring laughing and celebrating their win. Jungle Boy slammed his fist into the canvas, frustrated with the loss that was stolen yet again by Guevara.

Guevara and Reed backed up the ramp, and RUSH and Dragon Lee walked out on stage. RUSH and Dragon Lee clapped and extended their hands towards the victors. Guevara and Reed were surprised. They looked at each other and then SHOOK THE HANDS of RUSH and Dragon Lee!

This was a really fun match with the right balance of athleticism, character, and heat. Sammy Guevara shined as a detestable heel, while Jungle Boy remained smart and sympathetic. Myron Reed looked outstanding without overshadowing Guevara, and the LFI handshake afterward tied the episode together with a strong visual button.


The broadcast returned to the Control Center one final time.

What a night here on OverDrive.

But make no mistake — this was just the calm before the storm.

This Thursday on Ignition on the Paramount Network, it is Grand Prix Night Five. Two tickets to the Finals will be punched, and everything is on the line.

WSW_Grand_Prix_Night_Five_Card.jpeg

Thank you for joining us here on WSW OverDrive. For everyone at World Series Wrestling, I’m Mike Tenay — and we’ll see you Thursday night on Ignition.


Results


No.​
Result​
Stipulation​
Time​
1​
LFI (RUSH & Dragon Lee) def. The Von Erichs (Ross & Marshall Von Erich)​
Tag team match​
8:08​
2​
The Death Busters (Dawson & Wilder) def. Alex Reynolds & John Silver​
Tag team match​
2:53​
3​
Nixon Newell def. Shanna​
Singles match​
3:01​
4​
Sammy Guevara & Myron Reed def. Jungle Boy & Lee Johnson​
Tag team match​
9:22​

Grand Prix Finals

Grand Prix Finals
GP.jpg
Saturday, September 21: Streaming LIVE on Netflix
Grand Prix Finals Match​
WSW Women's World Championship: Tessa Blanchard (c) vs. Deonna Purrazzo​
WSW World Tag Team Championships: The Death Busters (c) vs. Karl Anderson & Doc Gallows​
$100,000 Cow Palace Battle Royal​
 

deltablues

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News and Rumors
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September 11, 2019

  • The start of the 2019 NFL season brought a dramatic impact to professional wrestling television ratings. Football season always sees wrestling ratings drop (typically, in the range of 5-10%); however, this past week turned a lot of heads – especially when looking at the 9/9 Raw numbers. The NFL Kickoff Weekend started Thursday 9/5 and concluded with a Monday Night Football doubleheader on 9/9, and saw the league draw massive numbers across NBC, ESPN, FOX, and CBS. Raw, Smackdown, and Ignition all saw their numbers drop.

  • The 9/5 Ignition: Grand Prix Night Four did 834,000 viewers and a .33 in the key 18-49 demo. The show was down 7% in viewership and 5.7% in demo rating. Ignition ran head-to-head with the Green Bay Packers vs. Chicago Bears game on NBC, which did 22M viewers and a 7.1 rating in 18-49. Across the board, cable was impacted by the football game. Ignition finished tied for 3rd on cable with Flip or Flop on HGTV – and behind Jersey Shore Family Vacation on MTV and US Open tennis coverage on ESPN.
    • The 9/12 Ignition will run against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers vs. Carolina Panthers game on the NFL Network. With the NFL set to run a full slate of Thursday night games this season, WSW will avoid direct head-to-head competition with the league when it moves to Tuesdays on 10/1.
  • The 9/9 Raw did 2,130,000 viewers and a .69 demo rating, the second lowest non-holiday numbers in history. The only shows that did worse in modern history were this past Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve (which are holiday outlier shows) and the 6/10 show which ran against Game Five of the NBA Finals. Despite the appearance of Steve Austin and a solid show with several good matches, Raw was no match for a Monday Night Football doubleheader. The show was down 15% in viewership and 16.8% in demo rating. The Houston Texans vs. New Orleans Saints game did 13,078,000 viewers and 4.44 demo rating, and the Oakland Raiders vs. Denver Broncos game did 10,619,000 viewers and 3.76 rating.
    • The third hour of Raw did the lowest hour in modern history aside from holiday shows. The main event ten-man tag team match averaged 1,788,000 viewers, making it the lowest non-holiday main event in history.
    • Raw finished eighth for the night on cable.
    • There has been a ton of reaction and “hot takes” surrounding Monday night’s numbers. When zooming the lens out, they do illustrate the slow, steady erosion of Raw’s numbers since WrestleMania. Without Austin, the show may have been in the range of 2M viewers. It is very possible Raw could drop below that 2M number this fall, a figure that was once unfathomable.
  • Despite no NFL competition, the 9/10 Smackdown was down. The show did 2,061,000 viewers and a .62 demo rating. The show was down 3.2% in viewers and 4.6% in demo rating. Smackdown still finished first for the night on cable.
  • Despite the disappointing rating, Raw was able to sell out Madison Square Garden with 12,500 fans thanks to an extremely strong walk up. Smackdown was a different story though, as the show only drew 7,000. This is the lowest number in company history for a TV taping in MSG.
    • Running back-to-back nights in the same building is tough; especially, with ticket prices as high as they are and a product that is not hot. Tickets for the back-to-back nights of Raw and Smackdown at the Chase Center in San Francisco in a couple weeks continue to be disappointing.
    • Smackdown featured an angle where Kevin Owens was fired which led to a big “WSW” chant within the building.
  • Outside of television ratings, perhaps the biggest wrestling news story of the week was Anthem Sport and Entertainment’s purchase of AXS TV and HDNet Movies. Anthem is the parent company of Impact Wrestling, and they will now acquire the AXS TV library of concerts, MMA, and pro wrestling content – which includes New Japan, WOW, and the US broadcast rights of old ROH. While no official announcement has been made yet, it is expected that Impact will move to AXS from The Pursuit Channel.
    • When Impact was canceled by Pop TV in late-2018, Anthem pursued a broadcast deal with AXS. No deal was made, with Impact’s poor reputation at the time cited as the major reason. AXS is also the US broadcast home for New Japan, and they did not see the need for more wrestling programming.
    • Now under the ownership of Anthem, it is unclear what the future of New Japan is on the network.
    • A number of AXS employees were laid off this week, most notably Adam Swift, the VP of Legal Affairs. Swift played a critical role in bringing New Japan to AXS, a move that was critical for the company’s growth in North America.
    • There are numerous interesting threads to this story. There is growing speculation that Anthem will push for a partnership between New Japan and Impact (something Impact has wanted for some time). New Japan has been adamant that ROH is their North American partner, and they have no interest in working with Impact. New Japan’s cold relationship with Impact stems from the treatment of Kazuchika Okada during his excursion in 2012.
  • WWE will run Clash of the Champions on 9/15 from the Spectrum Center in Charlotte. Every WWE main roster title will be defended on the show. Seth Rollins vs. Braun Strowman for the WWE Universal Title is the headliner.
  • NXT will air the first of two “specials” on USA on 9/17. The show will run 10 PM – 11 PM following Smackdown and serves as an introduction of the brand to the network and night. The show will be headlined by Roderick Strong vs. Velveteen Dream for the North American Championship.
  • NXT has sold out Full Sail for all of the October TV shows; the November shows will go on sale this week.
  • Paul Levesque was interviewed by Newsweek where he discussed the future of NXT:
    • He said he was most excited to have more TV time to feature talent and storylines. He noted that the one-hour runtime of the TV was perfect at the beginning of NXT, but it became more restricting and challenging as the brand and roster grew.
    • NXT is expanding from five to six Takeovers each year on standalone weekends (rather than partnering them with main roster PPVs as has been the norm). It will be very interesting to see how they schedule these – the Vince McMahon playbook would be to run head-to-head against WSW’s tentpole specials that stream on Netflix.
  • AAA’s Lucha Invades NY also runs 9/15 from the Hulu Theater. The show will feature Cain Velasquez’s second match. Velasquez has drawn a lot of interest from WWE and WSW. While promoting the show, Velasquez appeared as a guest on Ariel Helwani’s MMA Show this week and said:
We’ve been in talks with WWE. They’re going pretty good. We’ve also talked to WSW a bit too. I enjoyed my conversation with Shane, and I want to talk more. I think they are doing great things. Now that I’ve started to watch more pro wrestling, I think WSW is doing some really cool things. And WSW too does a lot of like, lucha stuff, you know. I think they have really good athletes, really good showmen. They are doing good thing right now, yeah.
  • As reported last week, AAA is now co-promoting the 9/15 show with Impact. It was officially announced this week that Killer Kross would be working the show, as his contract dispute with Impact continues.
  • Night Five of the 2019 Grand Prix airs on the 9/12 Ignition and serves as the block finals.
    • In the A Block, Will Ospreay and Kenny Omega are tied with 7 points apiece following their time limit draw on 9/5. An Omega win and Ospreay loss would see Omega advance to the Finals. An Ospreay win and Omega loss would see Ospreay advance. In theory, both could win, causing a tie, but they have not outlined the tiebreaker scenarios for this instance.
    • In the B Block, Kota Ibushi and Cody are tied with 6 points apiece; however, Ibushi has the head-to-head win over Cody, so he would advance in a tiebreaker scenario. Ibushi advances should he beat Claudio Castagnoli. Adam Cole has 4 points and faces Cody on Night Five. Should Ibushi lose, and Cole beat Cody, Cole would finish with 6 points and advance due to owning head-to-head wins over both Ibushi and Cody. Cody advances with a win over Cole and an Ibushi loss.
  • Advertised for Ignition: Grand Prix Night Five
    • A Block: Kenny Omega vs. AJ Styles
    • A Block: Austin Aries vs. Will Ospreay
    • A Block: Ricochet vs. Bandido
    • B Block: Claudio Castagnoli vs. Kota Ibushi
    • B Block: Adam Cole vs. Cody
  • WSW announced the 11/12 Ignition will be at the H-E-B Center in Cedar Park, TX, a prominent suburb of Austin. The arena will be set up for 6,900.
  • Bobby Lashley will undergo surgery to remove bone spurs in his elbow, and he is expected to be out three months. The procedure is not serious, and Lashley has been working through the injury during the Grand Prix (it has even been factored into the storylines of his matches). Prior to Jon Moxley’s injury which caused him to withdraw from the tournament, Lashley was scheduled to wrestle him on Night Five. However, with that match scrapped Lashley will be able to get the surgery a week earlier than anticipated. The post-match angle with Claudio Castagnoli on the 9/5 Ignition was shot to write him off the show for this reason.
  • The WSW house show tour is a single show 9/13 in Providence, RI.
 

Stojy

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As always, love the detailed weekly breakdowns that you provide from this universe. At this point, I don't really care if KO joins WSW or not, don't think he's really needed, but won't complain if he shows up.

Continuing to dig the Castagnoli angle as well. The more vicious side is something I want to see more of.

And of course Grand Prix, the makings of Omega/Opsreay and Cody/Ethan continue to be heaps of fun.
 
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