This was a hotly contested bout as Verville, and Nifty resorted to a number of questionable tactics to offset their high flying opponents. The issue was in doubt until Epic got nailed with a sick looking piledriver that had me wincing! Pretty Nifty established themselves as a team to be reckoned with, with this win.
Next up a three-way match: Uncle Funky vs NinJoe vs "Dynamite" Brian McFeters. This one was interrupted by a mysterious interloper who made quick work of all three. Result: No Contest I guess.
Third bout saw the rough and rugged Sue Jackson take on Bam (this was not an intergender match--Mr. Jackson was apparently the lad Johnny Cash wrote the song about!) In any event Bam scored the win.
The next bout was another tag team match: Mitch Johnson and Tony X taking on Mitchell Taylor and Zach Champ. I was unfamiliar with these two teams. Taylor and Champ were the heels.
Rounding out the first half of the show was a "street fight" match between Mike Musso and Roderick Street. The ring could not contain the enmity between these two men battled their way out of the ring and into the back. They brawled from one room to another, using every thing they could find to inflict damage on each other, including exercise equipment, a leather strap, and every wall or floor within reach!
Eventually they fought their way to the parking lot. Here the bed of a Dodge pick-up served as aring as the battle continued! By this time Street was bleeding profusely. The combatants fought their way back into the building and into a second ring! Here Street proved to be" bloody--but unbowed," as he ultimately rolled up Musso for a hard fought win.
After the intermission, the second half of the card began with a tag title bout between champions Jimmy "The Hype" Shalwin, and Max "Game Boy" Morrison taking on the "Wild Stallyins," Johnny Dynamo and C.J. Otis. The four men held a clinic on how to conduct a tag match. This was wild and wooly. The heelish champions made full use of their arsenal of devious tricks to seem on the verge of winning, but it was the challengers winning the titles as Otis forced Morrison to tap out.
Next up, a "Ladder Match" for the scheduled-to-be -retired POG Chaotic title. Noah Lott was the challenger, taking on his friend (and the Chaotic Champion) Dollar. These two know each other so well that at times we seemed to be watching a chess match as these two anticipated one another's tactics. In the end Lott eked out the win. He then place the retred title belt on Dan Severn's trophy shelf and shoo hands with Dollar.
Time for another tag match! First up, the team of Osiris and "The SI," began to walk to the ring when their foes, Idol Heinze and Magnum Conroy, attacked the much smaller SI with chairs. They targeted his knee, left him in a heap, and attacked Osiris in the ring! Eventually, SI made it to the ring and took a desperation tag from his partner.
SI was at least a hundred pounds smaller than both Heinze and Conroy, and was quickly forced to submit as they punished his already injured knee. Osiris demanded a rematch, thus setting up a story line for next season.
Now it was time for the main event as POG champion, Keith Creme, took on the challenge of Sean Tyler. Creme taunted both Tyler and the audience with his customary insults. The two men waged a heated battle. In the end Tyler won the match, and the title. The new champion celebrated with the audience as the beaten champion fled to the back with a bloody nose!
Price Of Glory will be idle during July, but returns on August 7th to begin season eight!
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