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View Full Version : Deep South Wrestling TV Results - 8th Apr 2007



LionDen
04-12-2007, 05:02 AM
Deep South Wrestling TV
Airing April 8, 2007 on CSS
Taped on March 29, 2007 in McDonough, Ga at the DSW Arena

The co-general manager of DSW, Krissy Vaine was in the ring preparing to address her adoring fans when Bag Lady burst through the front door. Bag Lady demanded her $500 payment from Vaine for attacking Angel Williams. Vaine called her a heathen and an ungrateful twit. Out of the goodness of her heart, Vaine had given Bag Lady a much needed bath, a cosmetic makeover and the clothes off her back. -- “Which I can see you’re still wearing” (her tone dripping with disgust). Bag Lady started to tussle with Vaine. Williams hit the ring and clubbed Bag Lady from behind. The co-GMs gave Bag Ladyr a beating before Williams rudely dumped her out of the ring. Nattie Neidhart came out to check on Bag Lady.

Next up was a brief ringside interview with Kofi Nahaje Kingston and Luscious. Seems that Kofi has found his soul mate.

Ace Steel was this week’s guest commentator alongside Nigel Sherrod.

(1) Kofi Nahaje Kingston pinned Frankie Coverdale with a flying bodypress at 4:31. Kingston accepted Coverdale’s offer of a handshake by applying a death grip. Coverdale looked mystified by Kingston’s chain wrestling. Kingston focused on the arm, using a short arm scissors. Coverdale pulled hair to back Kingston into the corner, popped him on the break, and got down and dirty. Kingston spun Coverdale in the corner and lit him up with chops. True to his throwback gimmick, Coverdale begged for mercy. When Kingston lowered his guard, Coverdale grabbed trunks and threw him into the turnbuckles. A Coverdale vertical suplex garnered only a one count. The fans rallied behind Kingston. Coverdale made a shaky climb to the second rope. Kingston caught him coming off with a shot in the breadbasket. On the comeback trail, Kingston connected with a dropkick and did his shoulder-shaking high legdrop to set up the finish.

Shantelle interviewed Ryan O’Reilly. O’Reilly said if working for the two most self-centered women in DSW wasn’t enough, he had the best of seven series against Bradley Jay for the DSW title coming up, so his plate was already full. Now, there was Bob “The Rebel” Hopkins.

I’m the fastest gunslinger here in Deep South. I promise you one thing. Tonight, your ass will ride off into the sunset with your tail between your legs.

O’Reilly was in the ring waiting for Hopkins and out came Bradley Jay instead. They had a pull apart brawl, and a damn good one at that, with both guys showing great fire. The arena erupted with a chant of “let the fight.” The announce team shilled for the best of seven series “coming to your town.” Among those out to pry them apart was James Rogers. It was likely the first and last time for Rogers to show his face on DSW television, since he was released last Friday.

In ring interview with Siaki. Shantelle was the target of Siaki’s abuse this week. Siaki said she smelled like the crowd. The funny part was that when started checking out her underarms. Siaki gave hometown hero, Heath Miller, a Bronx cheer. Siaki said Miller was beneath his level. Siaki dissed Miller’s “What time is it?” catch phrase, and acted pissed at the crowd’s Pavlovian “Miller time” response. “No, it’s not Miller time. It’s Siaki time to whip your butt all over this arena. Boo-yah!”

Eric Perez approached Miller as he was preparing to go through the curtain. Perez said he needed a big favor and asked Miller if he would let him have the match against Siaki. Miller politely declined. Perez asked Miller to reconsider because Siaki had been ducking him. Miller agreed, but said it was his opportunity to shine. “I mean tonight, it’s gonna be Miller time.”

(2) Heath Miller upset Siaki in 6:32 after distraction by Eric Perez. Miller got the loudest babyface pop of the hour. He got under Siaki’s skin bigtime by doing his catch phrase with the crowd. Miller capitalized on Siaki’s rage to gain an early advantage. Siaki fired a karate thrust to the throat. But Miller did a sweet up and over and took Siaki down with an armdrag. Sherrod suggested that Siaki’s ego had impaired his judgment. Miller tried another up and over, and Siaki slammed him onto his back. Miller went flying after absorbing a Samoan headbutt. Siaki took the starch out of Miller with a barrage of chops and punches and followed up with a running heel kick for a two count. Siaki worked over Miller’s lower back with driving knees and a surfboard variation. At the 5 minute mark, Miller avoided a corner spear, and Siaki’s shoulder rammed into the post. Both men down and hurting. Miller’s comeback consisted of a series of left jabs, a flying clothesline, a reverse elbow and a flapjack. Cut to Perez walking down the ramp. Miller charged into a Siaki powerslam. Perez jumped on the apron. Siaki and Perez exchanged heated words. Meanwhile, Miller was recovering. Siaki charged and Miller caught him with a roll up for the upset victory. Cut to shot of Perez with a big smile on his face.

Shantelle was backstage with Bad Seed (Shawn Osborn) and Bolen (Jon). They said they were gunning for the tag team titles. Bad Seed said no way lightning would strike twice for Robert Anthony and Johnny Curtis.

Neidhart conducted a ringside interview with Robert Anthony and Johnny Curtis. Anthony said they were batting a thousand against Bad Seed and Bolen (as opposed to their promos where they are batting .000), and tonight, they would be swinging for the fences. Curtis said the fans didn’t buy a ticket to hear their opponents talk trash. They came to see the hottest new team in DSW. Curtis milked the last line for a pop.

(3) Shawn Osborne & Jon Bolen beat Robert Anthony & Johnny Curtis in 6:13. Bolen used hair to maintain a side headlock on Anthony. A crisp, athletic sequence saw Anthony use a backflip to escape Bolen’s back suplex attempt. Anthony went for an O’Connor roll. Bolen hooked the ropes to block. Anthony ducked Bolen’s charging clothesline, connected with a beautiful flying back elbow, and took Bolen down with a headlock takeover. Curtis played turnabout on the hair pull. Curtis tripped over Osborne like a clumsy oaf, and the heels got heat on Curtis. The highlight was a nicely executed drop toehold/elbow drop combo. Anthony ran wild after taking the hot tag. He did a duck under floated into an inverted bulldog on Osborne. Steel called it the Hook, Line and Sinker. Anthony did his backflip/dropkick spot. Curtis went up top for the finisher, only to get dumped by Bolen. Osborne then pinned Anthony with his feet on the ropes.

Backstage, Shantelle asked G-Rilla about getting a non-title win over the tag team champions last week. G-Rilla said he and Freakin Deacon gave Team Elite a big surprise, and they should be the number one contenders, but tonight he had Mike Knox one-on-one. “I’m ready Knoxy are you?”

Neidhart asked Knox if he was disappointed about Team Elite’s loss. Knox said he was taught that it wasn’t how many times you fell off the horse that mattered. It was how many times you got back on.

G-Rilla, tonight is a defining moment in your career, in you life. Did you ever play chicken, boy? You ever been in a car with your foot to the floor going head on against another car? You know what happens? Somebody’s gonna turn the wheel. Somebody has to turn the wheel.(pauses and giggles like he’s not in his right mind) Do you really think for one second in your head that it’s gonna be me? Disappointed? Yeah. (takes a bite out of the camera).

(4) Mike Knox beat G-Rilla with an assist from Derrick Neikirk (7:49). The pop for Knox was on par with the one for G-Rilla. Cautious start with G-Rilla channeling American Dream mannerisms. The kids got fired up for G-Rilla. Knox tried a sucker punch on the break, but G-Rilla blocked it and nailed him with a Bionic Elbow. A second elbow put Knox down on one knee. G-Rilla put Knox down with a clothesline, but Knox rolled out from under G-Rilla’s elbow drop. Knox choked G-Rilla to keep on the mat and started in on his neck. G-Rilla kicked out at one after taking the sprinting legdrop. Knox used a short bulldog and G-Rilla kicked out at one again. Knox used a kneeling reverse chinlock. G-Rilla came back with elbows. G-Rilla got off his feet on a lariat. Both men down. G-Rilla on the comeback with more bionic elbows. G-Rilla did a 400 pound forward roll across Knox’s body that sounds more devastating than it looked. G-Rilla went for the ICU and Knox countered with a flatliner for a near fall. Knox signaled for his finisher, but G-Rilla ducked the Clothesline from Hell. Knox tried a high crossbody, and G-Rilla almost lost Knox making the catch. Scrappy McGowan got bumped as G-Rilla hit the ICU. G-Rilla looked over at McGowan. Then he looked around some more and pulled the straps down. G-Rilla finally gave Knox the big splash and Neikirk jumped him from behind. Neikirk lit into G-Rilla with crossface forearms.Team Elite drilled G-Rilla with a tandem spinebuster. Knox revived Scrappy to make the three count (now why didn’t G-Rilla think of that?).

Freakin Deacon tossed Neikirk down the ramp and decked him. Deacon went after Knox, who led him on a chase around the ring. Neikirk cut Deacon off at the pass with a sick chairshot to the head. Deacon’s feet went flying out from under him. Team Elite trapped Deacon’s neck between the guardrails, and Neikirk wacked the top of his head (actually all guardrail, thank God) with the chair. Deacon’s body was still and lifeless. Steel said Deacon was out cold after the first chairshot. Cut to a shot of the crowd craning their necks to get a closer look. G-Rilla appeared to be getting emotional as he tended to Deacon.