| |
THE TWO SHEDS REVIEW by Julian Radbourne
E-mail: twosheds316@aol.com
Website: www.twoshedsreview.com
Its always good to take a look at a promotion you havent seen
before, which is why, having met some of their stars a few months ago,
I was eager to get a look at the Midlands Pro Wrestling product, which
I was able to do, courtesy of their first ever DVD release, March Madness.
First up, John Bull & Das Inferno come to the ring. Das Inferno is
a massive guy, masked and dressed in the German national colours. Bull
tells of his delight at decimating Mad Mike at a previous show. Psycho
Steve then arrives on the scene, challenging the heels to a tag match
later on.
Then its on the evenings first bout, a number one contenders
match for the Central Counties title, as Stiro takes on Raze, who is accompanied
by Nero & Leon Lionheart. An okay bout, nothing exception here, and
to be honest it seemed like a training match at times. Raze got the win
and the title shot later in the show after an Ace Crusher.
Next, Danny Oxman goes up against Jett Black. With some good use of submissions
attempts to begin with, this match seems a little more intense than the
opener, with Oxman putting together some good power moves. Black eventually
taps after Oxman applies a Texas Cloverleaf. Afterwards, Alex Gold comes
to the ring and challenges Oxman, a challenge Oxman readily accepts.
Winner stays in tag action next. First, the Beach Boys, (no Good Vibrations,
sadly), take on the Lowlanders. Sadly, the MC doesnt tell us who
the individual wrestlers actually are, so I have no idea who is doing
what to whom. Some good double-team work from the Scots as they eliminate
the Beachers after a Yakuza kick. The losers are replaced by Jetta &
Fan Boy. Fan Boy annoys the hell out of me with his high-pitched screeching,
but thankfully the Lowlanders soon kick the crap out of him, and Jetta
and her buddy are soon on their way, although the lovely lady isnt
too happy about things. Then Team 3CW, Stevie Lynn & Chris Whitton
arrive on the scene. The 3CW boys put on a good showing, before Whitton
pins one of the Scots with a roll-up. Then, the final team, Jekkel &
Exodus, come to the ring. The masked men pound the hell out of their opponents,
as another masked team, Rhyme & Reason, watch on from ringside. A
brief fight back from 3CW doesnt help them as they eventually go
down to the masked mens version of the Doomsday Device. Good stuff
here.
The fourth bout of the evening sees the kendo stick waving Devil Man take
on the masked White Tiger. For some reason, even though this bout was
entertaining, I just couldnt get into it. However, the action improved
a little towards the end, which saw the Tiger take the win with a spinning
sunset flip.
The second half of the show began with a battle royale. By now you should
all know my feelings about reporting on these matches. Featuring wrestlers
such as Conscience, Ice XXVII, Rhyme, Reason, Shaun Hunter & Samurai,
and as is the norm with this kind of match, its one mass brawl,
looking like New Street in Cromer on a Saturday night. The match ended
when Samurai eliminated Leon Lionheart, kicking him off the ring apron.
Next up its Majik, in total heel mode here, in his old school challenge,
taking on Jayson Mayson. Fought over the rounds system, its a pretty
even contest, until Majik gets the win by count out after pushing Mayson
from the top rope to the floor. Then, as Majik celebrates in the ring,
the man he beat in his first old school challenge, Keith Myatt, appears
on the scene, demanding a re-match. Having already defeated Myatt once,
Majik refuses. Myatt then introduces Bubblegum, someone Majik is more
than willing to wrestle.
Tag action follows as Das Inferno and John Bull take on Psycho Steve &
Nero. Again, Im going to be totally honest, this bout just didnt
do it for me. While Nero, and to a lesser extent, Steve, were okay, Inferno
and Bull just seemed out of it, and Bulls finisher, a bossman slam
on Steve, just looked a mess.
Title action next, as Raze makes his second appearance, taking on Chris
Charizma for his Central Counties title. A good little bout here, certainly
better than the previous match, with some good moves from both men. Charizma
retained his title, pinning Raze after a sit down power bomb.
In conclusion - a good introduction to the MPW product, with the positives
far outweighing the negatives. WARs production values have certainly
got better since recently. However, the continued lack of commentary from
their video & DVD releases detracts from the shows they are filming.
With nobody to tell me about current storylines or about a wrestlers
background, I was left in need of some information, with no information
forthcoming. WAR really need to think about adding announcers in the future,
because it doesnt really make me want to go out and buy other titles
from their collection. That being said, this is the only criticism I have
of them production-wise.
Match of the night goes to the main event, Raza v Charisma, A good effort
here.
With thanks to Majik & Midlands Pro Wrestling for this DVD. You can
find out more about MPW by logging onto their website at www.mpwrestling.co.uk.
|
|