Fight week rolls on with UFC 191 Embedded leading into Saturday night’s UFC 191 event from Las Vegas. In this episode, flyweight title challenger John Dodson rushes home from Las Vegas to Albuquerque for the birth of his daughter. The fighters competing on the card then take care of their usual fight week obligations including signing posters and participating in photo shoots. Dodson makes his return to Las Vegas for fight week and shows off some baby pictures to teammate and top lightweight contender, Donald Cerrone. All of that and more, so check out episode three of UFC 191 Embedded above.
Tag: Other
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Ring Of Honor 8/29 Atlanta, GA, house show results: Jay Briscoe & Moose vs. Cedric Alexander and Adam Page
Submitted by Bryce Gaskin
– Cedric Alexander defeated Corey Hollis
– The Kingdom (Michael Bennett & Matt Taven) (w/ Maria Kanellis) defeated Will Ferrara & Watanabe
– Michael Elgin defeated Adam Page (w/ BJ Whitmer). Whitmer had 4 security guards with him during the match. After the match, Elgin laid out Whitmer’s security.
– War Machine (Hanson & Raymond Rowe) defeated ACH & Matt Sydal
– Mark Briscoe defeated Romantic Touch (Romantic Touch replaced Cliff Compton, because Compton was rushed from the venue with a medical emergency that turned out to be a seizure.
– Roderick Strong defeated Caprice Coleman
– Jay Briscoe defeated Moose (w/ Stokely Hathaway) by DQ. Adam Page attacked Briscoe, which caused the DQ, and Cedric Alexander came out to attack Moose then a tag team match was set.
– Jay Briscoe & Moose (w/ Stokely Hathaway) defeated Cedric Alexander & Adam Page (w/ BJ Whitmer)
– Adam Cole & reDRagon (Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly) defeated Jay Lethal (w/ Taeler Hendrix) & ROH Tag Team Champions The Addiction (w/ Christopher Daniels & Frankie Kazarian)
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Global Force Wrestling 8/29 Richmond, VA, house show results: Jeff Jarrett, Kevin Nash, Doc, Gallows
From The Diamond in Richmond, VA
Pat Buck def Dirty Money via piledriver
Buck was announced as being from Richmond. Match was short and nothing you couldn’t see at a local indy show
Pepper Parks def Kevin Matthews
Matthews cut a promo about how he was from New York. Amazingly, this successfully gets heel heat.
Ring announcer Brandon Baxter introduces Jeff Jarrett. Double J thanks various people who helped promote the show. He thanks the fans. He mentions that Karl Anderson can’t be on the show due to travel issues. Ali Akbar (dressed like Skandor Akbar) and Seiya Sanada (with a Japanese flag) walk to the ring. They say we don’t know travel issues until we’ve seen what it is like for them to try to travel through an airport. Main event is a handicap match since Anderson no showed.
Kimber Lee def Cherry Bomb
Sonjay Dutt pinned BLK Jeez
Good athletic style match.
Chris Mordetzky def Brian Myers with the Masterlock
Mordetzky was the only heel to go over all evening. Fans cheered both guys.
Kevin Nash cut a promo in the ring and said the Bullet Club was continuing the tradition started by the nWo, and would be watching the main event.
Doc Gallows with Bullet Babe Amber Gallows def Ali Akbar and Seiya Sanada in a handicap match after both Jeff Jarrett and Kevin Nash interfered.
Match was much too short to be a main event.
Notes:
– Card lasted exactly two hours including intermission which seems a bit short for a house show. Show took place in a 6 sided ring. There were approximately 250 fans in attendance. This would have looked like a reasonable crowd in a high school gym or national guard armory. It looked embarrassing in a baseball stadium. All fans were seated in four sections on the ground level right around the home plate area leaving 80% of the stadium empty.
– A meet and greet took place two hours before the show for fans who bought VIP tickets. The rest of us were allowed in an hour before bell time. We bought a Global Force Wrestling program specifically asking if the wrestlers who were still sitting at the autograph table (most everyone but Nash and Jarrett) would sign the book for free if we bought the book. The guy selling the program assured us they would. And some of them did. But about half of them charged me ten dollars to get a signature in a book I only bought because it would be cheaper than buying 8x10s of each wrestler individually.
– Guitars with a picture of Jeff Jarrett were being sold for $200. Fans who bought them also got to spend intermission with Jeff Jarrett and get their pictures taken with him.
– After the show Jarrett and Nash posed for photos in the ring for $20 a pop.
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UFC News: Cast announced for next season of Ultimate Fighter
Las Vegas – Competitors from 11 different countries have been cast for the next season of The Ultimate Fighter® led by UFC® interim featherweight champion and proud Irishman Conor McGregor, opposite former WEC® featherweight champion Urijah “The California Kid” Faber. The premiere episode, debuting on September 9 at 10 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1, will showcase 32 fighters competing for one of 16 spots featuring eight Europeans and eight Americans and the opportunity to be coached by two of the sport’s best athletes.
The Europeans will be led by Dublin’s own McGregor (18-2, fighting out of Dublin, Ireland), while the American squad will be under the tutelage of Faber (32-8, fighting out of Sacramento, Calif.). The fighters from around the globe will descend upon the Las Vegas desert for a chance at a UFC contract and the ability to be coached by two of the sports’ best. Given the history between McGregor and Faber’s Team Alpha Male gym, paired with national pride on the line, the teams’ rivalry will be fierce and competition intense.
McGregor took the MMA world by storm when he burst onto the UFC scene in 2013, quickly amassing a 6-0 record inside the Octagon® en route to becoming the interim featherweight champion. Currently riding a 14-fight winning streak, “The Notorious” is set to unify his title with pound-for-pound king Jose Aldo at UFC 194 on December 12 in Las Vegas.
This will be Faber’s second stint as coach, having served as head coach for season 15 against rival Dominick Cruz in 2012. Widely considered a pioneer amongst fighters in the lighter weight classes, Faber is one of the most recognized and respected competitors in mixed martial arts history.
Below is a full list of competitors by team and in alphabetical order (name, professional record, age, hometown):
United States
Europe
Andreas Quintana, 8-1, 24, Albuquerque, N.M.
Artem Lobov, 11-10-1-1, 28, Dublin, Ireland
Austin Springer, 8-0, 27, Portland, Ore.
Abner Lloveras, 19-7-1, 32, Barcelona, Spain
Billy Quarantillo, 6-1, 26, Tampa, Fla.
David Teymur, 3-1, 25, Stockholm, Sweden
Brandon Ricetti, 7-1, 28, Chico, Calif.
Djamil Chan, 19-2, 24, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Brennan Sevin, 7-1, 29, Chauvin, La.
Frantz Frank Slioa, 4-0, 24, Stockholm, Sweden
Chris Gruetzemacher, 12-1, 29, Peoria, Ariz.
Marcin Wrzosek, 10-2, 27, Bydgoszcz, Poland
Jason Soares, 8-0, 25, Miami, Fla.
Martin Delaney, 10-1, 36, Bathgate, Scotland
Johnny Nunez, 5-1, 29, Las Vegas, Nev.
Martin Svensson, 14-5, 30, Malmo, Sweden
James Jenkins, 8-1, 29, Long Island, N.Y.
Mehdi Baghdad, 11-3, 29, Toulon, France
Jason Gonzalez, 9-2, 25, Colton, Calif.
Mohamed Grabinski, 10-1, 23, Dusseldorf, Germany
Julian Erosa, 14-2, 25, Yakima, Wash.
Paulo Boer, 10-1-1, 29, Holland
Mike Flach, 7-1, 27, Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.
Sascha Sharma, 8-2, 27, Stuttgart, Germany
Ryan Hall, 4-1, 30, Falls Church, Va.
Saul Rogers, 10-1, 25, Bolton, England
Thanh Le, 4-1, 29, New Orleans, La.
Sean Carter, 10-1, 30, Essex, England
Tim Welch, 12-5, 25, Glendale, Ariz.
Thibault Gouti, 10-0, 28, Avignon, France
Tom Gallicchio, 19-8, 28, Perth Amboy, N.J.
Vladimir Sikic, 10-0, 25, Frankfurt, Germany
The show will feature 12 episodes airing Wednesdays on FOX Sports 1. Each episode’s winner will advance in the single-elimination tournament, leading to the season finale card on December 11 in Las Vegas. The finale will be headlined by former lightweight champion and current second-ranked featherweight Frankie Edgar taking on Faber teammate, No. 3 Chad Mendes.
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Condit talks Lawler’s thumb injury and Legacy Fights results,, Inside MMA TV report
LOS ANGELES – Aug. 28, 2015 – With the news of his title fight against UFC Welterweight Champion Robbie Lawler being cancelled tonight due to a Lawler thumb injury, Carlos Condit gave AXS TV’s INSIDE MMA his reaction to the news in an interview with series hosts Kenny Rice and Bas Rutten. A video clip of the interview is available here: http://bit.ly/IMMACondit
UFC women’s bantamweight contender Holly Holm sat down with correspondent Ron Kruck on AXS TV’s INSIDE MMA tonight for an in-depth interview about her upcoming fight with UFC champion Ronda Rousey. During the interview, Holm discussed how her boxing experience transfers to the octagon, how comfortable she is facing Rousey on the ground, and if she thinks Rousey is beatable: http://bit.ly/IMMAHolmAug28
Also on tonight’s show, UFC featherweight Chad Mendes discussed how he matches up with upcoming opponent Frankie Edgar and how he would adjust his game plan if fought UFC Interim Featherweight Champion Conor McGregor again: http://bit.ly/IMMAMendes
Highlights from tonight’s broadcast of AXS TV FIGHTS: LEGACY FIGHTING CHAMPIONSHIP 44 are available here, presented by AXS TV FIGHTS commentators Pat Miletich and “The Voice†Michael Schiavello: http://bit.ly/Legacy44
Official results from Legacy 44 are as follows:
Main Event – Welterweight Fight – Alex Morono (11-3) defeated Valdir Araujo (14-6) via knockout at 2:18 in round three.
Lightweight Fight – Carrington Banks (4-0) defeated Justin Reiswerg (9-5) via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27).
Catchweight Fight (165 pounds) – Sage Northcutt (5-0) defeated Rocky Long (21-34-1) via submission (rear naked choke) at 3:30 in round two.
Lightweight Fight – Jonathan Harris (10-5) defeated Rey Trujillo (18-5) via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27).
Welterweight Fight – Charlie Ontiveros (6-3) defeated Bilal Williams (3-2) via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28).
Bantamweight Fight – Colin Wright (4-2) defeated Ryan Hollis (9-7) via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27).
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WWE News: Dean Ambrose talks Piper, Wyatt, The Shield, Thatcher
The following is from a third party:
The Two Man Power Trip of Wrestling takes a walk on the side of lunacy as we welcome WWE Superstar, “The Lunatic Fringe” Dean Ambrose. Ambrose clawed his way to WWE with a fearless career on the independent scene, absorbing and dishing out punishment in equal measure. He competed in violent environments and unmanageably sacrificed his body with the goal of inflicting as much damage on his opponent as humanly possible.
Now as we wind down 2015 and look ahead, we look back with Dean on his affinity for Rowdy Roddy Piper, his feuds with Bray Wyatt and Seth Rollins and what is next for a possible future WWE Champion. We are also joined by Dean Ambrose’s trainer Les Thatcher and hear directly from him the kind of student Ambrose was and what he thinks of the progress Dean has shown thus far in his career. Thatcher is also quite outspoken about the current state of WWE, NXT and the overall 2015 wrestling product.
How does his preparation differ from other stars in the WWE:
I like to take things moment to moment. I don’t try to be anything that I’m not because that would be in-authentic and I was blessed with certain talents and certain abilities and others I wasn’t. I try to do things I do and do them well and I don’t try to pretend to be anything that I’m not. If I’m in a bad mood, your gonna get Dean Ambrose in a bad mood. If I’m in a good mood your gonna get happy, fun Dean Ambrose that day. I would literally take whatever I’m feeling, that’s just what you will see in the ring.
I like to just be myself and I just go out there and kind of just do whatever I want to my own devices and it’s kind of just not just the fans but WWE slowly realized another Dean Ambrose isn’t going to walk through the door anytime soon. So I kind of occupy my own space and kind of carve out my own little spot. Fans don’t want to tune in and see you do the same things every week and when they hear your music for me they like to think that any wild thing may happen when I come through the curtain because sometimes I don’t know. I make as much up as I possibly can as I go along.
Memories of Rowdy Roddy Piper:
Everybody loves Roddy Piper. There’s so many of these shocking out of nowhere passings and it’s so weird because these are the guys that my generation grew up watching, it sucks. Everybody loves The Hot Rod and my favorite Roddy Piper memory is a very specific one because I recently not too long ago watched it. Starrcade 96 when he fought Hogan for the Championship when he came back to WCW, it was a terrible, sloppy match with two old guys but awesome and was such a spectacle.
The cool part of it was his entrance. One of the best entrances you will ever see if you really watch it and you are into the story and you really watch what he is doing, it’s like this death march to the ring. You have this on-going decade long blood-feud with Hogan and he knows that he is going to get beat up by the nWo and ganged up on 20-1 and it’s a one man war against the nWo and he’s just coming down the aisle as simple as can be, no flashy entrance or pyrotechnics. In WWE everyone has the special entrance.
In NXT they have a dance move that they do and they get in the ring the same way every time and its like their schtick. It was so refreshing to go back and watch that because he comes out and just stares at the ring and burns a hole with his eyes and walks down the aisle as simple as humanly possible. His eyes are just cold and it just tells so much, you know he is willing to go in there in the middle of that ring. He is going to fight to the end. If he walks away with the championship, cool but he’s prepared for this to be the end. It’s very intense and most people who watch it wouldn’t put that much thought into it but get on WWE Network, watch Starrcade 96 and just watch Piper’s entrance it’s such a cool thing.
Comparison to Superstars like Piper, Terry Funk and Brian Pillman:
I really can’t answer that because I try not to put any thought into what I am doing. I go by what I feel, whatever happens, happens. I think a lot of those guys probably thought the same way.
Why does he work so well with Seth Rollins:
Our styles just meshed well. First time we ever wrestled was in FCW. We never crossed paths before. It was maybe one of the first times that people started to pay attention to what was going on in Developmental just from a wrestling standpoint. I had a certain following and he had kind of ran with a different crowd on the indy scene like Ring of Honor and it kind of was a clash of indy worlds happening in Developmental. It just clicked immediately. I felt that stuff that he did was complimenting the stuff that I did.
The stretching and they physical stuff in the holds, it was such a phsyical style I was doing at the time and just kind of meshed with his and it was like peanut butter and jelly, like mixed perfectly together the stuff that we were doing. He is such a smart guy and visualizes and comes up with cool things and then you have just the way that I would like go off-the-cuff a lot of times, we could go out and wrestle thirty minutes and literally not talk at all before hand, it just meshes well and then you know WWE styles still mesh and it’s hard to explain. There’s just that certain chemistry with people. He’s so good, its like anyone can have a good match with Seth Rollins and we kind of bring out the best in each other from a healthy competitive standpoint and all the great opponents always had that together like Ric Flair/Ricky Steamboat and Nick Bockwinkel/ Verne Gagne.
Is their any one specific WWE Superstar looking to bring down the house:
I think all of the core group of guys right now, myself, Seth Rollins, Roman Reigns, Cesaro, The Wyatts I think we all have that competitive chemistry with each other because we are kind of pushing each other and we are the guys kind of carrying the load right now as far as 300 nights a year. We are the guys who are counted on to tear the house down and wrestle 15-20 minutes on Raw each week and I think that’s a real healthy thing across the board.
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UFC Fight Night Saskatoon: The Velten Scoring System

Submitted by Dan Velten
This week, part 3 of this 10 part series, I will continue to examine the current scoring system and also make comparisons to alternative scoring systems. Since this is an attempt to create a more viable and fair system, I am already making some adjustments based on the first two shows, as well as taking into account some helpful feedback from the readers. This is not a hard and fast experiment looking only at data. It is an evolving work in progress, and I want to implement any necessary changes ASAP.
“10-Point Open” Renamed
The previously named “10-Point Open,” in which more of the allotted 10 points are used, will now be called the “True 10-Point” or simply, “True 10.” While this seems like merely nomenclature, it is not. It was brought to my attention that the “open” scoring system is actually already in play in some other fighting organizations, but it means something different than what I was intending.
Apparently, a scoring system can be called “open” when the fighters can see the score in between rounds. I have never seen this before, but I suppose that after the round, the judges’ scores are somehow made public, by either an announcement or scoreboard. If anyone has further insight into how this works, I would love to hear more. Obviously, knowing the score changes the game, and I am curious as to whether or not this leads to more fair outcomes, more exciting fights, or perhaps more boring fights. Clearly, it kills the excitement of the judges’ decision at the end.
Point Allocation Wording in “True 10 Point” System Adjusted
It will now be as follows:
– 10-10: No clear round winner; if the case can be made for either fighter, then this is the appropriate round score
– 10-9: Winner of the round is clear, but the loser did not take much damage
– 10-8: Winner of the round is clear, but the round loser took damage
– 10-7: Winner significantly won the round, and the round loser took a lot of damage
– 10-6: Winner did tremendous damage and it could have been stopped
– 10-5: Winner dominated the entire round and it should have been stopped, possibly repeatedly
Weighted Rounds for Main Events and Championship Rounds
A reader asked me why I weighted the rounds as 1,2, and 3 points. My answer was that I did not like when one fighter wins the first two rounds and the loser basically has to finish in the third because judges rarely give 10-8’s, so a decision really only has one possible outcome. Admittedly, it is a pretty weak argument, but I got sick of seeing guys coast because they knew they had already won a decision. The sport of Mixed Martial Arts, as I see it, is about somewhat safely replicating a fight to the death in the streets, and thus the fighter should always be trying to finish since there is no time limit to a real fight.
More importantly, it took the onus off the judge to do anything other than pick a round winner; the points would take care of themselves. That said I did not consider the point differential for 5 round fights, so I decided it would be scored with rounds at 1,1,2,2, and 3 points respectively. Initially, when creating this method, I thought that since it is a fight, it gets harder the longer it lasts so the third round should be weighted heavier, but the more I think about it, the less that makes sense from a fighter’s perspective.
As a fan, I want excitement all the way to the end, but maybe more needs to be considered. However, I’m not giving up just yet. The one good thing about this scoring is that it makes the judges just pick a round winner, and not have to pick a score as well. So I’m giving this system one more week of fights, as I’m not sure it is valid. If I do not find it worthy after this card, I may drop the weighted points and simplify it to “Select a Round Winner”
Having addressed the updates, it is now time to introduce a new segment:
Questioning the Decision: Michael Johnson vs. Beneil Dariush
OFFICIAL RESULT: 29-28 Dariush, 29-28 Johnson, and 29-28 Dariush
RESULT: Dariush by Split Decision“In My Book…”
Traditional Scoring:
Rd 1) 10-9 Johnson Rd 2) 10-9 Johnson Rd 3) 10-9 Dariush
RESULT: 29-28 JohnsonTrue 10:
Rd 1) 10-9 Johnson Rd 2) 10-10 Rd 3) 10-10
RESULT: 30-29 JohnsonWeighted:
I screwed up in my original scoring article because I was writing from cage side and my battery was dying so I rushed it and scored it 4-2 Johnson, but it should have been a 3-3 Draw because I actually had round one being 1 point for Johnson, round two should have been 2 points for Johnson, and round three was 3 points for Dariush.
RESULT: 3-3 Draw
Pride:
RESULT: Johnson
Analysis:
This fight was the perfect example of a match that should have been a draw. Johnson connected more times statistically, and stuffed takedowns, but did he WIN A FIGHT? Not “in my book,” (see what I did there) but then again, neither did Dariush. These guys were equally matched and there would have been no harm in declaring the fight a draw. Instead, we get a borderline robbery as the guy who should have at best received a draw, wins. This highlights the primary problem with the current system. The loser should never be able to win, no matter how one cherry picks the data.
There is more to scoring than just connecting punches. MMA is far more complex than boxing. If we want to just score on stats, then we will quickly turn the sport into a terrible kickboxing league. There has to be something that takes into account the feeling that 94% of the fans felt when watching that fight, and the majority of people felt Dariush DID NOT WIN.
Two problems arise from these types of decisions. The first is that now Johnson has to start over. He will not get that high profile fight next he wanted. One could argue that he does not deserve it since he did not do enough. Valid point. However, Dariush MAY get that fight, and he does not deserver it either. Why not just rematch the two?
The second and bigger problem is for the viewer. We feel ripped off. We watched 15 minutes of a pretty good fight, and then did not get the payoff. In fact, we got the screw job. Just like in pro wrestling, too many screw job finishes sour the viewer on the product. This turns fans off because they think the sport is fundamentally broken, or ironically, fixed. Can you imagine if you were watching the Yankees outscore the Orioles 5-4 and then the Umpires just told the fans after 9 innings that the Orioles won? This scenario is what the “10-Point Must” system allows to happen. It must be changed.
UFC Fight Night Saskatoon —
Maryna Moroz vs. Valerie Letourneau
Official Result: Letourneau by Unanimous Decision, 29-28, 29-28, and 30-27
True Ten: Rd 1) 10-9 Letourneau Rd 2) 10-9 Moroz Rd 3) 10-9 Letourneau
Result: 29-28 LetourneauWeighted: Rd 1) Letourneau + 1 Rd 2) Moroz + 2 Rd 3) Letourneau + 3
Result: 4-2 LetourneauPride: Letourneau
Analysis:
This was a fine decision. I agree. This was a fight where one girl won for sure in an even match and the scoring was valid and necessary.
Olivier Aubin-Mercier vs. Tony Sims
Official Result: Aubin-Mercier by Unanimous Decision, 30-27, 30-27, and 29-28
True Ten: Rd 1) 10-7 A-M Rd 2) 10-8 A-M Rd 3) 10-8 A-M
Result: 30-23 Aubin-MercierWeighted: Rd 1) A-M + 1 Rd 2) A-M + 2 Rd 3) A-M + 3
Result: 6-0 Aubin-MercierPride: Aubin-Mercier
Analysis:
When a guy has your back, he is always a half second from a finish with the rear naked. When a guy has your back for all five minutes of a round, you should have lost in that round, which is why I scored round 1 a 10-7 advantage for A-M. He did not allow Sims a second of offense. A lot of people argue that being on top should not necessarily score because you are not necessarily doing anything, but given that the guy on the bottom does not want to be there, I think you have to score top position even if not much damage is being done.
Neil Magny vs. Erick Silva
Official Result: Magny by Split Decision, on scorecards of 29-28 Magny, 29-28 Silva, and 30-27 Magny
– True Ten: Rd 1) 10-8 Magny Rd 2) 10-8 Magny Rd 3) 10-9 Magny
– Result: 30-25 Magny– Weighted: Rd 1) Magny + 1 Rd 2) Magny + 2 Rd 3) Magny + 3
– Result: 6-0 MagnyPride: Magny
Analysis:
I cannot see how anyone would score a round, much less the fight for Silva. I’ll give you that maybe round 3 were even, but Silva did not win that fight. However, that is a bad judging call, and not a problem with the system. In this case, the system worked. The right man won the fight because the majority of the judges (2) got it right, which corrected for the one idiot judge.
Overall Analysis:
It is still super hard for me to score without reverting back to the traditional mindset. This show had a few close rounds but nothing that I would vehemently argue, and the decisions all came in correct, which is the important part. However, I do think there needs to be a massive judging symposium where the criteria for scoring is discussed, and then each judge has to grapple for five minutes and just get grappled to death so they can better understand why ground control should be scored more. Everyone knows that punches and kicks hurt, but it is tough to explain the punishment of grappling without it being experienced.
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WWE announces a new NXT Network special
On Thursday, WWE announced that their Wednesday, December 16 NXT show at London’s SSE Wembley Arena will be a live WWE Network special — a Wednesday afternoon show here in the U.S.
The show is part of a seven-date United Kingdom tour the NXT brand is running, their first foray overseas.
NXT Champion Finn Balor, Samoa Joe, Tyler Breeze, and Women’s Champion Bayley have been announced for the show thus far.