Wednesday 2 December 2020

AEW Dynamite Full Show Live Streaming 2 December 2020 HD AEW Winter is coming Highlights HD

AEW Dynamite Live 12/2/20



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AEW Winter Is Coming Results: Winners, Grades, Reaction and Highlights

Sana Ejaz Khan

    Credit: All Elite Wrestling

    Winter is coming, AEW declared ahead of Wednesday's Dynamite, a show featuring Jon Moxley's defense of Kenny Omega for the world championship.

    That encounter headlined a broadcast that featured the latest chapter in intensely personal rivalries, several stars seeking much-needed wins and a potentially career-altering Battle Royal.

    Who emerged from the evening's landmark broadcast with gold, diamonds and riding a wave of momentum as 2020 draws to a close? Find out now with this recap of the December 2 presentation.



Match Card

1 OF 6

    Already announced for the evening's blockbuster broadcast are:

        

    • AEW World Championship Match: Jon Moxley vs. Kenny Omega
    • Cody Rahodes and Darby Allin vs. Will Hobbs and Ricky Starks
    • Frankie Kazarian vs. Chris Jericho
    • Dr. Britt Baker vs. Leyla Hirsch
    • Dynamite Diamond Battle Royal

        

    Coverage of the biggest episode of Dynamite ever begins at 8 p.m. ET.

Dynamite Diamond Battle Royal

2 OF 6

    Credit: All Elite Wrestling

    The Dynamite Diamond Battle Royal kicked off this week's show, the two remaining competitors to fight on next week's show for the Dynamite Diamond Ring.

    Competitors included: Miro, Hangman Page, John Silver, Scorpio Sky, Shawn Spears, Marq Quen, Isiah Kassidy, Kip Sabian, Matt Sydal, Serpentico, Jungle Boy, Luther, Alex Reynolds, Orange Cassidy, Matt Hardy, Sammy Guevara, Joey Janela, Lee Johnson, MJF and Wardlow. 

    Spears earned a measure of revenge from the Casino Battle Royal, eliminating Sydal in a nice callback of sorts. Sky eliminated Spears to continue their rivalry, much to the dismay of Tully Blanchard. Hardy eliminated Kassidy, unbeknownst to Quen.

    Spears, already eliminated, blasted Sky with a cheap shot courtesy of a steel slug and led to his rival's departure.

    Hardy and Quen worked together to eliminate Silver and Reynolds. In a cool spot that plays up Evil Uno's invitation to Page from last week, Dark Order saved the Anxious Millennial Cowboy. Hardy dumped Page moments later, though.

    Cassidy eliminated Sabian and paid immediately as Miro attacked him on the floor, sending him into the steel post, though neither man had been eliminated.

    The eliminations of Hardy and Quen brought the fight to The Inner Circle's MJF, Wardlow and Guevara, Miro and Jungle Boy.

    The united front of the Inner Circle dumped the previously unstoppable Bulgarian Brute before setting their sights on Jungle Boy. The Spanish God battled with young Jack Perry until MJF conveniently shoved them to the arena floor.

    Wardlow warned MJF that Cassidy was never actually eliminated. The heels brought Freshly Squeezed back into the match and Cassidy rocked both men with Orange Punches before dumping Wardlow. The final two combatants in the match, Cassidy and MJF will meet on next week's show for the $50,000 Dynamite Diamond ring.

         

    Result

    MJF and Cassidy were co-winners

        

    Grade

    C+

        

    Analysis

    Battle Royals are what they are: a mass of bodies kicking and punching their way to elimination. This was above average in that it furthered several on-going storylines and highlighted Miro in a way he had not been to this point.

    The artist formerly known as Rusev tore the match up, scoring elimination after elimination and looking as dominant as he has in either WWE or AEW in years. He absolutely should be put in a position to build on the momentum of his performance.

    Hardy's heel turn manifested itself in the sneaky elimination of Isiah Kassidy, MJF's cerebral manipulation of his fellow Inner Circle member Sammy Guevara continued and Wardlow appears ready to snap his charge in half at any given moment.

    Those stories helped prop this one up and elevate it beyond the standard fare.

Frankie Kazarian vs. Chris Jericho

3 OF 6

    Credit: All Elite Wrestling

    For the first time in their storied careers, SCU's Frankie Kazarian and "Le Champion" Chris Jericho battled in singles competition, the heel greeted upon his arrival by the masses serenading him with "Judas."

    The quicker, confident Kazarian took the fight to Jericho early, dropping a leg across his chest on the ring apron. The veteran babyface blasted Ortiz, but Jake Hager provided just enough of a distraction to allow The Demo God to deliver a Codebreaker. 

    Jericho dominated throughout the break, working over the torso of his opponents while Ortiz taunted Kazarian from the floor. Back from the timeout, Kazarian got his knees up to block the lionsault and delivered another leg drop for two.

    Kazarian broke out the Flux Capacitor for a near-fall, both frustrating and firing the babyface up. He applied Jericho's own Walls of Jericho against him, which Ortiz attempted to break up. Hager ordered him back as The Inner Circle continued to exhibit disarray.

    MJF and Wardlow arrived on the scene, the former threatening to throw in the towel. Sammy Guevara prevented it, Jericho saw him holding the towel and nearly fell prey to consecutive rollups from Kazarian. A last-second Judas Effect allowed Le Champion to emerge with a hard-fought victory.

    After the match, Guevara and MJF nearly came to blows. A pissed-off Jericho laid down the ultimatum: the group had seven days to decide whether they would stay together or break up forever.

       

    Result

    Jericho defeated Kazarian

        

    Grade

    C+

        

    Analysis

    Kazarian was working at a whole different speed than Jericho, and while there was nothing inherently wrong with the match, the difference in paces was abundantly clear the longer the match went on. 

    Why the match went as long as it did when it was mostly just the background for the latest drama within The Inner Circle is another question entirely, but this did what it set out to accomplish: set up the ultimatum for next week's show.

    The tension between Guevara and MJF is real, and it would not be surprising whatsoever if The Spanish God figures into MJF's match with Orange Cassidy. Regardless, it feels as though Guevara could be on the outside looking in at a faction he was once such a key member of.

Britt Baker vs. Leyla Hirsch

4 OF 6

    Credit: All Elite Wrestling

    Dr. Britt Baker returned to the squared circle this week as she battled 24-year-old Leyla Hirsch.

    Hirsch downed Baker early, outwrestling her. The good doctor turned the tide in her favor, though, and dominated throughout the break.

    Back from the commercial, Hirsch wiped Rebel out at ringside after Baker pulled her "bestie" in the way. Baker delivered a Sling Blade on the floor, survived an armbar and looked for the Lockjaw.

    Hirsch escaped that submission attempt and looked for the armbar again. Baker fought out but ate a pump knee to the face. Hirsch scaled the ropes after momentarily selling her back.

    Rebel hopped up on the apron, provided a momentary distraction and allowed Baker to drive her opponent into the middle turnbuckle. A fisherman neckbreaker gave way to the Lockjaw, and Baker scored the win.

    Thunder Rosa hit the ring, attacking Baker. A brawl broke out, the budding rivals unloading on each other until coaches and AEW officials finally restored some semblance of order.

        

    Result

    Baker defeated Hirsch

        

    Grade

    C+

        

    Analysis

    Again, a large portion of the women's match was conducted during the commercial break.

    With that said, Hirsch and Baker worked well together, and the reversals and counters late were a nice touch. The finish was a bit disjointed, with the delay by Hirsch and Rebel hopping on the ring apron for no apparent reason, but it led to the right competitor going over.

    The post-match brawl was fantastic and creates instant buzz for a Baker-Thunder Rosa match. That match is exactly the type of secondary rivalry this division should have been built on from the beginning.

Cody Rhodes and Darby Allin vs. Ricky Starks and Powerhouse Hobbs

5 OF 6

    Credit: All Elite Wrestling

    The monthslong rivalry between Darby Allin and Team Taz wrote its latest chapter Wednesday as the TNT Champion teamed with Cody Rhodes to battle Powerhouse Hobbs and Ricky Starks.

    Rhodes and Allin isolated Starks, working him over and cutting the ring off from the dominant Hobbs. The babyfaces controlled throughout the commercial timeout and continued to wear down Absolute after. A blind chase by Allin led him right into a massive lariat clothesline by Hobbs.

    The big man sent the champ into the guardrail, then teed off on the much smaller competitor as he tagged into the match for the first time.

    Hobbs and Starks worked over the core of Allin, looking to drive the fight out of him. 

    Allin finally made the hot tag to Rhodes, who exploded into the match, taking the fight to both opponents. The American Nightmare launched himself off the top rope with the Cody Cutter to Starks, but not before Allin tagged himself into the match.

    Rhodes delivered a tope suicida to Hobbs, and Allin finished Starks with the Coffin Drop for the win.

    After the match, Hobbs attacked Allin, then Arn Anderson. Dustin Rhodes made the save until Brian Cage attacked. Team Taz stood tall having beaten down the babyfaces. They teased hitting Rhodes with the FTW Championship until Sting made his AEW debut, slowly stalking toward the squared circle and coming face-to-face with Anderson.

    After a nod of approval to Allin and the Rhodes brothers, he headed back up the ramp amid falling snow.

         

    Result

    Rhodes and Allin defeated Team Taz

        

    Grade

    B

        

    Analysis

    There is something about Tony Schiavone exclaiming, "It's STING!" that warms the soul and takes the viewer back to their childhood.

    Sting arriving as snow fell, making the save for Cody, Dustin and Darby, was a great way to welcome him to the AEW family, and the staredown with Anderson was a great touch of nostalgia.

    The question is whether Team Taz gained anything whatsoever from this ordeal.

    Hobbs and Starks are two major cogs of AEW's bright future. Ditto Cage. Team Taz lost the match, then bailed out of the ring when Sting arrived, despite a distinct numbers advantage. It was curious use of them, but if they get to share the screen with someone of Sting's stature, it will benefit them in the long run.

    At least theoretically.

    Still, special appearances by Sting will never not be cool. The key will be for AEW to ensure those appearances remain special and the legend does not become overexposed at the expense of the foundation of the company's future. 

AEW World Championship Match: Jon Moxley vs. Kenny Omega

6 OF 6

    Credit: All Elite Wrestling

    Don Callis joined Jim Ross, Excalibur and Tony Schiavone ahead of the night's hotly anticipated main event pitting AEW world champion Jon Moxley against Kenny Omega. A big-fight feel encompassed the festivities, complete with the reveal that, should the match go past 10 p.m., TNT would stick with the show until a winner was determined.

    Chain wrestling early gave way to strikes from Omega and a hurricanrana that sent the champion to the floor. It was on the floor that Moxley gained his first real advantage of the match, brawling with the top contender through the commercial break.

    Coming out of the timeout, Omega delivered a dragon screw leg whip in the ropes, then dropped the champion knee-first into the guardrail. The Cleaner worked the ankle and knee of his opponent, despite attempts by Moxley to break his grip.

    Omega cerebrally picked his opponent apart for several minutes before a German suplex slowed his roll. Moxley built momentum through another commercial break, laying into Omega with knife-edge chops that reddened the challenger's chest and drove the air out of him.

    Omega dodged a blind charge and wiped the champion out with a plancha. Back in the ring, though, Moxley caught his opponent with the Paradigm Shift from out of nowhere. Rather than covering, though, he headed outside the ring and grabbed a pair of steel chairs.

    Mox set up the chairs, inviting Omega to sit. They came face-to-face, the champion daring the challenger to hit him. They exchanged slaps, the jabs, until the champion rocked Omega. The challenger answered with a V-Trigger, then the snapdragon suplex. A second snapdragon followed. Moxley dodged a V-Trigger and delivered a release German suplex.

    A King Kong lariat and second Paradigm Shift earned the champion a close near-fall. Moxley looked to follow up with a tope, but Omega caught him with a V-Trigger in midflight.

    Back in the ring, Omega delivered the Tiger Driver '98 for a two-count of his own. 

    The combatants teased finishers, each escaping the other's trademark stuff. Omega delivered a ripcord V-Trigger, but Moxley kicked out. 

    On the floor, Moxley delivered a Paradigm Shift into the ringside heaters, prompting the referee to call for the doctor. Referees and Callis made their way to ringside, but Moxley tossed Omega into the ring and fired off a flurry of right hands. 

    Callis hoped up on the apron and caught a big right hand from Mox. The microphone he had found its way into Omega's hands. The challenger blasted Moxley with it, busting him open. Omega obliterated Moxley with a barrage of V-Triggers as Schiavone asked what happened to the gentlemen's agreement Omega was so adamant about in the build to the match.

    Omega delivered the One-Winged Angel to earn the win, then absconded with the title. As Alex Marvez caught up with Omega and Callis in the parking lot, the latter revealed the world would hear from them Tuesday on Impact Wrestling.

         

    Result

    Omega defeated Moxley to win the title

         

    Grade

    B+

        

    Analysis

    The match was fantastic up until the overbooked finish, which could have been accomplished without the fake injury spot. It slowed the momentum the performers had built to that point, and while it gave reason for Callis to be at ringside, that could have been accomplished through any number of ways, the least of which being the moment Moxley introduced the chairs to the mix in violation of the "gentlemen's agreement."

    Speaking of which, it was a brilliant way to establish Omega as a heel by having him spit in the face of his own stipulation. The guy who was so worried about outwrestling his opponent was the one who sneakily resorted to using weaponry and cheating his way to a victory. 

    It makes him wholly unlikable and will only help him as he looks to emerge as the most hated man in AEW.

    Which brings us to the biggest development on this show: an apparent working relationship between AEW and Impact Wrestling.

    Callis revealing Omega will appear Tuesday on Impact is a game-changer, the type of development that could breed cross-promotional storytelling. It's not particularly surprising because Impact has shown a willingness to work with other promotions before, and the star power of an Omega only serves to boost their viewership and awareness.

    It remains to be seen how this benefits AEW, but there is no denying the buzz of the screwjob finish will help attract viewers to the show in the coming weeks as they look forward to the latest developments in these massive stories.

Monday 30 November 2020

WWE Raw Highlights Full Show HD 30 November 2020 WWE Raw Highlights 30 November 2020

 

WWE Raw 11/30/20



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WWE Raw Results: Winners, Grades, Reaction and Highlights from November 30

Sana Ejaz Khan

    Credit: WWE.com

    WWE still has a few weeks before its annual Tables, Ladders & Chairs pay-per-view, so it is taking the slow approach with the buildup. As of Monday morning, no matches had been confirmed.

    That all changed during Raw when Keith Lee, Riddle and AJ Styles fought in a Triple Threat match to see who would get to challenge Drew McIntyre for the WWE Championship.

    Jeff Hardy and Elias continued their feud this week with a Symphony of Destruction match that featured different instruments around the ring that could be used as weapons.

    We also saw McIntyre give an exclusive interview, and Randy Orton appeared on "A Moment of Bliss" to talk about Bray Wyatt.

    Let's take a look at everything that happened on Monday's Raw.

'A Moment of Bliss'

1 OF 9

    Raw opened with Alexa Bliss already in the ring to host an episode of "A Moment of Bliss." She wasted no time welcoming Orton to the show. The set was two chairs that looked like they belonged in a kid's playroom and a little cage with a doll inside it.

    Bliss pointed out how it was clear Orton was in a bad mood and played a clip of The Viper losing to Styles last week. Orton talked about how he has had to bury part of him deep down so he could blend in. He compared the voices he hears to the voices Wyatt hears.

    The Viper talked about how he burned down Wyatt's cabin because it was his weakness and now he thinks he has found Wyatt's new weakness with Bliss. She looked him right in the eye and asked: "Who is manipulating who?"

    The lights started to drop and Orton just said, "See what I mean?" When the lights came back on, The Fiend was in the ring looking at Orton holding Bliss in his arms. The Fiend held out his hands and Orton handed her over before rolling out of the ring with a smile on his face.

                            

    Grade: B+

                            

    Analysis

    Anything with The Fiend and Bliss has to be viewed through a different lens than the rest of Raw. This segment was just the right amount of bonkers to work perfectly.

    The feud between Orton and Wyatt could be great for both men if it is booked right, and if we get more segments like this, it will eclipse the WWE title feud.

    Bliss has been the MVP of these segments lately. She has found a new niche and is playing her role to perfection.

Elias vs. Jeff Hardy (Symphony of Destruction)

2 OF 9

    WWE aired a video recapping this feud with one of Elias' songs playing over the footage before he made his way to the ring to face Hardy. The ring was surrounded by various instruments to use as weapons.

    The action quickly spilled out of the ring where Elias hit a big jumping knee to prevent Hardy from hitting him with a violin. He dropped The Charismatic Enigma's face onto the apron and slammed his head into a piano.

    The piano started to move, and Elias found R-Truth hiding inside. He took off while several Superstars came out to chase him. Hardy and Elias took a few of them out with guitars as we went to a break.

    We returned to see Hardy hitting a string of signature moves for a two-count. Elias rammed his head into a guitar he wedged in the corner for another near-fall. Elias put some guitar pics between his fingers and used them like brass knuckles.

    Elias brought Hardy back outside and slammed his head into some drums. Hardy avoided a running knee that hit a gong near the announce table. The Enigma went for Whisper in the Wing, but Elias hit him with a guitar. Hardy grabbed the bottom rope to break the pin.

    Elias electrocuted himself with a speaker, and Hardy put him on top of a table. He climbed to the top turnbuckle and hit a Swanton for the win. He hit his head on the steps on the way down but appeared to be OK.

                           

    Grade: C+

                           

    Analysis

    This match had some fun moments, but it felt like one bout too many for this feud. Their final encounter should have been the Guitar on a Pole match a few weeks ago.

    The spot when Hardy's head hit the steps was frightening, especially after what happened to his brother a couple of months ago when he faced Sammy Guevara at Full Gear.

    The stuff with the 24/7 title just illustrates how WWE has no new ideas for what to do with that belt or the people it puts in those segments.

Ricochet vs. Slapjack

3 OF 9

    Ricochet and Retribution gave separate backstage promos before this match began. Slapjack spoke about how he is a weapon for Retribution, and Ricochet said he is going to stop trying to save Mustafa Ali and just be better than him.

    Ricochet hit a springboard crossbody right away before hitting a flurry of strikes in the corner. Slapjack got in a little offense before Ricochet regained the upper hand and hit a standing shooting star press for a near-fall.

    Ali called Mace and T-Bar down, but Ricochet threw Slapjack into them before taking out all three with a dive. He rolled Slapjack back in and prepared to finish him off. Dana Brooke came out of nowhere and slapped Ali in the face. She yelled at him about Reckoning, and the distraction allowed Slapjack to hit his finisher for the win.

                            

    Grade: C

                             

    Analysis

    The promos before this match were both strong. Ali is great on the mic, and Ricochet showed more emotion in his speech than we usually see from him.

    The match itself was average, especially considering who was involved. Both Ricochet and Shane Thorne have proved how good they are many times, and this bout did not feel like they were giving their all. It suffered because WWE was trying to tell a bigger story at the same time.

    The inclusion of Brooke at the end was a nice bit of continuity after Mia Yim took her out before Survivor Series, but her actions led to Ricochet's loss, so he might be a little upset with her.

'Miz TV'

4 OF 9

    The Miz and John Morrison were in the ring after a commercial to host an episode of "Miz TV." They welcomed Sheamus to the show.

    Sheamus was in no mood for their jokes because they were going to be opponents later in the show when he would team up with McIntyre for a tag match.

    The Miz asked him about giving McIntyre the family heirlooms a few weeks ago and said McIntyre is a bad friend for not getting him something in return. He called Sheamus an afterthought who used to be the top dog in WWE.

    The Celtic Warrior took off his jacket and got in Miz's face. He attacked both men and easily beat them down until Miz hit him with the briefcase.

                             

    Grade: B-

                            

    Analysis

    This was the second talk-show segment after "A Moment of Bliss" opened the broadcast. It was a little excessive to have two of these segments during the first half of the show, but both felt completely different, so it wasn't too bad.

    This was nothing special, but it did a good job setting up the tag team match later in the show and planting the seeds for a possible Money in the Bank cash-in or Sheamus turning on his friend.

Asuka and Lana vs. Shayna Baszler and Nia Jax

5 OF 9

    Lana surprisingly got a two-count on Shayna Baszler right away. The Queen of Spades took her down, but Asuka came in and made the save. The tag champs grabbed both of them and swung them into the barricade at the same time.

    We returned after a break to see Lana trying to take down Jax with a sleeper hold. Jax easily threw Lana to the mat and choked her against the middle rope.

    The tag champs continued to dominate Lana while Asuka recovered on the apron. The Ravishing Floridian shoved Jax into the ring post, and both women made the tag to their partners.

    Asuka began to build some momentum as she took it to Baszler with a barrage of strikes. Lana tagged herself in, and Asuka had to save her from Baszler's clutches. Lana covered Baszler for the win.

                              

    Grade: D+

                             

    Analysis

    Asuka and Baszler weren't in this match together much, and that ended up being its downfall. Lana and Jax have no chemistry as opponents, and it showed here.

    The idea of Lana and Asuka winning the women's tag belts before a team like The Riott Squad is a sad indicator of how much thought WWE spends booking this division.

Cedric Alexander vs. Xavier Woods

6 OF 9

    Xavier Woods and Kofi Kingston came out and gave a great promo about how many times they have beaten The Hurt Business. This obviously brought the group out to respond.

    Cedric Alexander challenged Woods to a match, but as the show was going to a commercial, he attacked Woods before the bell to get an early advantage.

    We came back to see Woods unloading on Alexander in the corner. Alexander dropped him across the top rope to turn the tide back in his favor.

    Woods began to make a comeback and hit the Honor Roll for a two-count. He sidestepped a suicide dive and sent Alexander into the barricade. When they got back into the ring, Alexander hit the Lumbar Check for the win.

                              

    Grade: B+

                           

    Analysis

    This is what happens when you put two exciting, competent workers in the ring together. They produce a fun match that highlights their strengths.

    Woods is one of the most underrated individuals in WWE. Everybody knows he is great in tag team matches, but seeing him perform this well in a singles bout was a nice change of pace.

    After this feud is over, it's hard to imagine whatever comes next will produce as many entertaining encounters as this storyline.

Keith Lee vs. Riddle vs. AJ Styles

7 OF 9

    Riddle and Styles took the fight out of the ring right away. Lee was going to dive onto them, but both men cleared out of the way when they saw him coming.

    Lee scored the first two-count of the match on Riddle. The Limitless One slowed down the pace a bit before Riddle started firing back with forearm strikes. One big shot from Lee put him back on the mat.

    Omos helped Styles hit Lee with a running knee before Riddle took them both out at ringside. Styles countered a Broton before Lee sent him flying out of the ring.

    Lee began to focus on Riddle as he threw him across the ring and crushed him in the corner. Lee countered a triangle submission, but Riddle kicked him in the head.

    All three men came close to winning several times before Styles hit Riddle with the Phenomenal Forearm for the win.

                          

    Grade: B

                          

    Analysis

    This was a solid match from three Superstars who are known for having different kinds of athleticism. Their various styles all worked well together.

    The backstage segments with Riddle leading up to the match were not great, but his work in the ring made up for it.

    Lee was the standout with some of his power moves and impressive speed, but Styles winning was the right call. He and McIntyre will put on a great match at TLC.

Dana Brooke vs. Reckoning

8 OF 9

    This match was booked after what happened earlier between Ali and Brooke. Reckoning hit a dropkick right away, but Brooke got the upper hand and nearly pinned her.

    Reckoning grounded her in a submission for a little while, but Brooke was able to escape. She began to build up a head of steam. Ali tried to distract her, but Brooke got the pin with a roll-up.

                             

    Grade: D

                               

    Analysis

    The biggest failure on WWE's part is how long it took Mia Yim to get a match on Raw. Ali screaming at her for losing didn't help.

    This bout was short and didn't accomplish anything except adding another loss to Retribution's record.

The Miz and Morrison vs. Sheamus and Drew McIntyre

9 OF 9

    The main event was a tag match with The Miz and Morrison taking on Sheamus and McIntyre. Earlier, The Miz tried to convince Styles to help him cash in his MITB briefcase.

    Sheamus immediately pushed Miz to the corner and hit some body blows before throwing him with a fallaway slam. He threw him to the corner so he could tag Morrison.

    McIntyre came in and easily took down Morrison before tagging in Sheamus for some double-team moves. He single-handedly took on both men before telling Styles to join them. He argued with The Phenomenal One for a moment, but Omos got in his way.

    After a break, The Miz and Morrison were controlling the pace against Sheamus. McIntyre tagged in and started throwing Miz around the ring.

    Sheamus begged for the tag, but Morrison pulled him off the apron and threw him over the barricade. Styles came flying in with a Phenomenal Forearm to McIntyre and told Miz to cash in. Styles handed the ref the briefcase, but Miz yanked it back. McIntyre popped up and nailed him with a Claymore kick before setting his sights on Styles. Omos saved him from certain destruction.

                           

    Grade: B-

                            

    Analysis

    There was a little too much going on here, but the Superstars involved managed to weave all of the stories together well enough for it not to be confusing.

    The match had some good action and gave us a taste of what a proper tag team with Sheamus and McIntyre would be like. It was a decent ending but far from the best match or segment of the night

Sunday 29 November 2020

Mike Tyson vs Roy Jones Jr Full Fight Live Streaming HD

Watch Mike Tyson vs. Roy Jones Jr 11/28/20

Watch Mike Tyson vs. Roy Jones Jr 11/28/20 Online 28th November 2020 Full Show Free

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# Undercard Live @8PM ET.
# Maincard Live @9PM ET.
# Tyson vs. Jones Jr Will Be The Final Fight So It Should Be After 10.30PM ET
# Dailymotion HD 15 Parts Live every 15 Minutes during live.
# Dailymotion HD 3 Parts Replay After Live.

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Dailymotion Opendrive SD Mystream NetU Download HD

Other Qualitys, Hosts & Fullshow Soon

~~~~~~~~~~~~

Entire Show
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Opendrive Live HD
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