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Abel Booker, Cocaine, Jacksyn Crowley & Steven Flowe vs. Beastman, Big Vito, Kongo Kong & Mr. Happy

Match

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Current Total Rating (?)
Valid votes: 2
Number of comments: 2
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Average rating: 4.00  [2]
Average rating in 2026: 4.00  [2]
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Lankywave wrote on 31.01.2026:
[3.0] "Slow, uneven affair that barely got off the ground, opening with little energy and quickly feeling directionless. Most of the action was sparse and disjointed, with little in the way of memorable sequences or pacing to keep the audience engaged, though the wrestlers themselves leaned into their characters well enough to give the match some personality. The finish was negligible, and with minimal investment or innovation, it largely served as filler rather than anything consequential."
TPG wrote on 24.01.2026:
[5.0] "This eight-man tag ends up being better than it has any real right to be, even if it never pushes beyond the boundaries of a fairly standard multi-man match. The work itself is solid across the board: sequences are clean, the teamwork looks sharp, and nothing feels overly rehearsed or mechanical. It's the kind of match that flows easily without demanding too much investment, which works in its favor on a busy card. Where the bout becomes more interesting is in how it continues the slow internal collapse of the St. Claire Monster Corporation. Mr. Happy once again being ignored by his own team is the most effective recurring beat here, and his frustration boiling over into attacking opponents on the floor adds a nice layer of chaos late in the match. The finish, however, is oddly constructed. Big Vito DDT'ing Kongo Kong behind the referee's back directly leads to Steven Flowe and Cocaine picking up the win; a classic Russo swerve, which feels counterintuitive given Vito and Cocaine's established animosity. It doesn't sink the match, but it does introduce a bit of unnecessary confusion. The post-match angle is arguably more memorable than the bell-to-bell action. Another teased brawl fizzles out as Kong and Beastman leave, while Mr. Happy storms past them and heads to the back alone, clearly fed up. It's effective character work and continues to position him as the emotional fault line within the group. All told, this is a competent, inoffensive multi-man tag elevated slightly by ongoing storyline threads. Nothing essential, but a perfectly serviceable match that does its job. **1/4"