La Faccion Ingobernable in-ring return set for next AEW Collision

Rush and Dralistico of La Faccion Ingobernable are now confirmed for their in-ring return for the upcoming AEW Collision episode.

LFI member Rush and Dralistico will now take part in a 4-way tag match on the March 7 episode of Collision. Rush and Dralistico are now scheduled to face The Swirl (Blake Christian & Lee Johnson), The Outrunners (Turbo Floyd & Truth Magnum), and Private Party (Isiah Kassidy & Marq Quen) with $200,000 on the line.

Rush has been out of in-ring action and sidelined with a knee injury since November, 2025. He was previously scheduled to face Bandido for the ROH World Title at ROH Final Battle, which was later scrapped for a Survival of the Fittest match. His tag team partner, Dralistico, underwent surgery in December, 2025.

AEW Collision lineup | March 7, 2026

The upcoming March 7, 2026, episode of AEW Collision is set to take place at Tucson Arena in Tucson, Arizona.

LFI (Dralistico & RUSH) vs. The Swirl (Blake Christian & Lee Johnson) vs. The Outrunners (Turbo Floyd & Truth Magnum) vs. Private Party (Isiah Kassidy & Marq Quen) – $200,000 4-way tag team match

Rush and Dralistico both likely need surgery for their injuries

Both Rush and Dralistico look to be out of action for some time.

Bryan Alvarez is reporting that both members of LFI will likely need surgeries for their respective injuries. For Rush, Alvarez writes that he’s been working through knee injury and as a result, he’s worse off.

“We are told Rush has been working with a bad knee for years, but because he wanted opportunities on Collision and Dynamite he didn’t want to take time off,” Alvarez writes. “Working through it made it worse, and as Tony Khan noted in a media call this week, he’s off the Ring of Honor Final Battle show and almost certainly needs surgery. He will be evaluated in the next week or so and almost certainly undergo surgery. It is believed he had knee surgery previously in Mexico but it was messed up and didn’t solve the problem.”

As for Dralistico, he suffered an injury to his ear in two different matches. Like his brother, he tried to work through his injury, but eventually was unable to.

“Dralistico suffered injuries to his ear in two different matches. He also worked through it since he was hoping to get regular work on the main roster, but eventually it became too painful and he was told he’d need surgery to fix it,” Alvarez says. “He’s either already undergone surgery or will undergo surgery shortly.”

Rush was scheduled to face Bandido at Final Battle but was replaced by a Survival of the Fittest match. Additionally, it was announced on Friday that Rush would vacate the ROH Tag Team titles with Sammy Guevara, who will now team with The Beast Mortos to face Tommy Billington and Adam Priest in a match for the vacant titles at Final Battle.

La Faccion Ingobernable tag match added to AEW Collision

A tag team match featuring members of La Faccion Ingobernable has been added to the lineup for this Saturday’s AEW Collision episode. 

La Faccion Ingobernable’s Rush & Dralistico will team against The WorkHorsemen’s JD Drake & Anthony Henry on the Saturday, November 11 AEW Collision. 

The La Faccion Ingobernable stable made their AEW return on the October 28 Collision show after months away from the promotion. Weeks of vignettes aired leading up to their return which came in saving FTR from an attack at the hands of House of Black, Ricky Starks, and Big Bill on that show. 

Rush & Preston Vance then teamed with FTR in the main event of the November 4 Collision against Starks, Bill, and Gates of Agony in an eight-man tag team bout. 

Already announced for Collision is a trios bout with Sting, Darby Allin, and Adam Copeland teaming against Lance Archer & The Righteous. 

This week’s Collision episode will be taped Friday in Oakland, California to air Saturday at 8 p.m. Eastern time in its normal time slot. 

The lineup: 

  • Sting, Darby Allin & Adam Copeland vs. Lance Archer & The Righteous (Vincent & Dutch)
  • La Faccion Ingobernable (Rush & Dralistico) vs. The WorkHorsemen (JD Drake & Anthony Henry)

La Faccion Ingobernable make AEW return on Collision

Rush and La Faccion Ingobernable are back.

The House of Black circled around FTR after Dax Harwood lost his match against Ricky Starks on Saturday’s Collision. That was when Rush, Dralistico, Preston Vance, and Jose the Assistant made their return, clearing the ring and saving FTR from an attack.

After disappearing from AEW TV for the last several months, vignettes have been shown on Collision of LFI beating up people in a parking lot. Last week, Rush cut a promo in what appeared to be an office building in front of his stablemates saying he had worked too hard to not be seen as a star, and was tired of being kept off television because he had been labeled too dangerous. He said he had learned English and “their style of wrestling” only to see others get what he deserves.

It was announced back in July that Rush had signed a new contract with AEW. He hasn’t wrestled for AEW since May, with LFI losing to The Acclaimed and Billy Gunn.

Tag Team title match announced for ROH TV

ROH has set a date for Violence Unlimited’s first Tag Team title defense.

Homicide & Chris Dickinson will defend their ROH Tag Team titles against La Faccion Ingobernable’s Dragon Lee & Kenny King on the ROH TV episode that premieres the weekend of Saturday, September 11. Homicide & Dickinson won the titles by defeating The Foundation’s Rhett Titus & Jonathan Gresham (filling in for the injured Tracy Williams) in a Fight Without Honor at July’s Best in the World pay-per-view.

Dragon Lee & King formerly held the ROH Tag Team titles together. They were champions going into ROH’s 19th Anniversary PPV this March, but Dragon Lee had to miss the show due to injury. La Bestia del Ring replaced Dragon Lee at the PPV, and he and King lost the titles to Titus & Williams.

For ROH’s Death Before Dishonor PPV, Homicide, Dickinson & Tony Deppen have issued a challenge for three Pure wrestlers to face them in a six-man tag match. The challenge has been accepted by a team consisting of one Pure wrestler from the past, one from the present, and one who is considered part of the future. The identities of Violence Unlimited’s opponents will be revealed on ROH Week By Week next Tuesday.

Death Before Dishonor is taking place on Sunday, September 12.

Violence Unlimited to make ROH in-ring debut

Ring of Honor’s newest faction is set to make its in-ring debut.

ROH has announced that Violence Unlimited’s Brody King, Homicide & Chris Dickinson will face La Faccion Ingobernable’s Rush, Kenny King & Bestia del Ring in a six-man tag match on the ROH TV episode that premieres the weekend of Saturday, April 24. Violence Unlimited debuted at last month’s ROH 19th Anniversary pay-per-view. Tony Deppen is also a member of the group.

After Rush retained his ROH World Championship against Jay Lethal in the main event of the 19th Anniversary PPV, Brody King made his way out as La Faccion Ingobernable were beating down Lethal and the rest of The Foundation (Jonathan Gresham, Tracy Williams, and Rhett Titus). King said Rush has had the numbers game against him, but now King has numbers of his own. King was joined by Deppen, then the returning Homicide and debuting Dickinson appeared.

Brody King, Deppen, Homicide, and Dickinson stood tall after beating down La Faccion Ingobernable. King extended his hand to help Lethal up, but he then dropped Lethal with a lariat. The show ended with Homicide giving Lethal a Cop Killa.

Brody King had challenged for Rush’s ROH World Championship in the main event of December’s Final Battle PPV. Rush defeated King after getting help from Dragon Lee and Bestia del Ring.

The ROH TV episode that premieres the weekend of April 24 will also feature Dak Draper vs. Eli Isom. Plus, The Righteous’ Bateman, Vita Von Starr, and Dutch will speak.

La Faccion Ingobernable to face The Foundation on ROH TV

Image: ROH

Top factions will face off as part of the final build to Ring of Honor’s 19th Anniversary pay-per-view.

La Faccion Ingobernable (Rush, Dragon Lee, Kenny King & Bestia del Ring) vs. The Foundation (Jay Lethal, Jonathan Gresham, Tracy Williams & Rhett Titus) in an eight-man tag match has been announced for the ROH television episode that premieres the weekend of March 20. The episode is the go-home show for ROH’s 19th Anniversary PPV.

The 19th Anniversary event is airing on PPV and HonorClub on Friday, March 26. It will be headlined by Rush defending his ROH World Championship against Lethal. Dragon Lee will also defend his ROH Television Championship against Williams at the PPV.

“The Foundation deeply believes in competing with honor and adhering to rules. Conversely, LFI prides itself on being ungovernable, winning at any cost and humiliating its opponents,” ROH wrote about the feud between the two factions.

On an episode of ROH TV last month, Dragon Lee & King defeated Lethal & Gresham in a Pure Rules match to win the ROH Tag team titles. The finish of the match was Dragon Lee pinning Gresham after hitting an illegal closed-fist punch while the referee’s attention was turned away.

ROH TV results: Eight-man tag main event

Location: Baltimore, Maryland

The Big Takeaway —

Tracy Williams put down the newly reinvented World Famous CB in a Pure Rules match. In the main event, La Faccion Ingobernable fought to a brutal no contest with Brody King, PCO & The Briscoes.

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Quinn McKay welcomed us to the show, per usual. She revealed the stacked main event, pitting La Faccion Ingobernable & Flip Gordon against Brody King, PCO & The Briscoes. McKay also announced the opening match on the card: Tracy Williams vs. The World Famous CB (formerly known as Cheeseburger). It seems as though Cheeseburger has been repackaged which is a good move on ROH’s part. 

McKay then shifted the focus to last week’s broadcast. We got a recap of the Vincent/Beer City Bruiser incident where Bruiser seemingly turned heel after smashing a bottle over Matt Taven’s head. 

Some post-match comments aired from Beer City Bruiser as well. Bruiser essentially said he was tired of being second and being everybody’s bitch. Brian Milonas approached him and questioned his actions, but Bruiser walked away. 

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Tracy Williams had a pre-match promo. He said that The Foundation’s goal is to take underutilized professional wrestlers and show them the light of being a Pure wrestler. Williams pointed to stablemate Rhett Titus as an example of this. Williams also noted that he realizes the talent of “World Famous CB” and he won’t be taking him lightly.

The World Famous CB also had some pre-match comments. CB said that the Cheeseburger gimmick is in the past — and that it was the best and worst thing to ever happen to him. He also said that joining the Pure division will help him break through the glass ceiling that the Cheeseburger gimmick set for him. 

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Tracy Williams defeated The World Famous CB in a Pure Rules match (13:04)

CB and Williams tangled up early with Williams getting the advantage, locking in multiple headlocks. As commentary noted, Williams had a great reach advantage over CB and it showed.

After a commercial break, CB began to regain some control in the match as he worked on the arm of Williams. CB jumped on Williams’ back and instead of using a sleeper hold, he cinched both arms behind Williams’ back. Williams bit down on the rope, causing him to use his first rope break. 

Williams regained his position quickly after, hitting a series of suplexes and then attempting his crossface. CB got his foot on the rope before Williams could lock it in, costing CB his first rope break. CB tried to submit Williams with an armbar, but he used his second rope break. The match sped up after that, with CB getting in some signature offense including a standing superkick. Williams ended up regaining his composure and spiking CB with a piledriver for the win

**********

La Faccion Ingobernable (ROH World Champion Rush, ROH Television Champion Dragon Lee & La Bestia Del Ring) & Flip Gordon vs. Brody King, PCO & The Briscoes ended in a no contest (14:23)

Amy Rose joined the commentary team for this match.

An interesting note before the match: Mark and Jay Briscoe came out separately.

Mark Briscoe and Gordon began the match. Gordon had the advantage early on, but Mark turned it around and powerslammed Gordon. LFI jumped off the apron while Gordon was getting beat down and began admiring each other’s hair. Jay Briscoe tagged in and stomped on Gordon in the corner. He threw Gordon out of the ring, but LFI tossed him right back in and laughed. 

King tagged in and chucked Gordon out of the ring, but LFI again tossed him right back in and taunted. Jay Briscoe tagged back in and ran into a flying Gordon. Gordon tried to extend his arm for a tag, but all three members of LFI jumped off the apron instead. Mark Briscoe came in and hit the Redneck Boogie on Gordon and tried to pin him, but LFI came in and all hell broke loose. 

Rush took a chair and drove it into King’s knee and followed that up with taking an extension cord and whipping it into King’s knee as well. LFI positioned King on the apron and draped him while Lee stomped on him and sent him to the floor. Lee and PCO were the legal men after the chaos. But when PCO went to dive on LFI on the outside, they shoved Gordon in harm’s way. 

In the final moments of the match, King and Lee had an exchange in the ring that saw Lee get the best of King with help from LFI. Mark Briscoe set up a chair in the ring and dove onto a pile of practically everybody in the match. King positioned Rush on a table and instructed PCO to go to the top rope, which he did. PCO then crashed into the table by himself after Rush moved out of the way. Finally, referee Todd Sinclair called the match a no contest as all hell continued to break loose. 

After security and multiple ROH officials rushed the ring to put a stop to the chaos, the cameras cut backstage to The Foundation. Jonathan Gresham and company shook their heads as the broadcast went off the air. 

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Final Thoughts —

Another Monday and another great showing for ROH. Seeing Cheeseburger repackaged was something i didn’t expect, but it was for the better. CB put up a great fight against Tracy Williams and i hope he is a future player in the Pure division.

I’m also glad we saw the return of ROH World Champion Rush and his faction. They’re absolutely phenomenal heels and do a lot for the ROH product. They just need to be on TV more. The dynamic of the match with them letting Flip Gordon getting beat up by himself early was brilliant. The match was an absolute war and one of my favorites so far this year. The no contest finish was the right move, as well. All in all, this was my favorite ROH TV episode of 2021 so far.

ROH notes: Eight-man tag match set, The Bouncers sign new deals

– An eight-man tag match will headline Ring of Honor television the first weekend of February.

ROH has announced that Brody King, PCO & The Briscoes will face La Faccion Ingobernable (ROH World Champion Rush, ROH Television Champion Dragon Lee & La Bestia del Ring) & Flip Gordon in an eight-man tag match on the ROH TV episode that premieres the weekend of February 6.

“LFI member Kenny King is unable to appear, so the ROH Board of Directors named Gordon to be his replacement. RUSH, Lee and Bestia are said to be less than thrilled about the board’s decision. Their reaction is understandable considering Gordon, Brody King and PCO were associates not all that long ago,” ROH’s Kevin Eck wrote.

Rush retained his ROH World Championship against King in the main event of December’s Final Battle pay-per-view. Rush won that match after interference by Lee and Bestia del Ring.

– In an interview with PWinsider, The Bouncers (Beer City Bruiser & Brian Milonas) revealed that they’ve come to terms with ROH on new contracts. Beer City Bruiser & Milonas are facing The OGK (Matt Taven & Mike Bennett) on the episode of ROH TV that premieres this weekend.

ROH announced earlier this month that Mark Haskins, Bandido, Amy Rose, Bateman, Brian Johnson, Sumie Sakai, and Tracy Williams have also re-signed with the promotion.

ROH Honor Reigns Supreme results: Villain Enterprises vs. La Faccion

– As announcers Ian Riccaboni and Caprice Coleman began to introduce tonight’s show, NWA Worlds Heavyweight Champion Nick Aldis stormed out to interrupt. He was with Kamille and Thomas Latimer and cut a great promo basically explaining that since Marty Scurll showed up at the NWA Into the Fire pay-per-view last month, he was here tonight to pay Scurll back.

Brody King and Flip Gordon came out and got into it with the NWA crew. It was a quick and fiery way to kick off the show and build this revamped cross-promotional angle.

Rey Horus defeated Andrew Everett

Very impressive match. There was a sparse crowd in Concord, which was apparent as soon as the camera cut to the ring for this one. It took a few minutes for them to heat up, but after a few minutes in, these two started cooking.

Everett hit a wild Asai moonsault from the top rope to the floor, and later Horus flew over the corner to the floor, taking Everett out with a tope con giro. They traded chops on the floor, and at one point they did a spot where they both missed their chops and hit the ring post.

Everett landed two quebradas in a row inside the ring for two. It’s crazy how smooth he is and how agile he is considering his size. He landed the “touch-toe” moonsault, the inverted gainer-type moonsault he used last night against Dragon Lee, for two, but a few minutes later Horus pinned Everett with a twisting body scissors driver from the top for the win.

This was very good. Everett looked great this weekend, and Horus will have no problem getting over if he sticks with ROH as a regular.

Dalton Castle & Joe Hendry defeated The Briscoes and Brian Johnson & PJ Black in a three-way tag match

Brian Zane of Wrestling With Wregret joined Riccaboni and Coleman on commentary for the next match and did a great job. He was a natural fit with this team.

The Briscoes were very over with this crowd and got a big reaction during their entrance. Tons of “Man up!” chants throughout this.

Before things got started, Johnson came out and yelled at everyone in the ring. He said that while The Briscoes and Castle were former champions, they still needed to get out of his way. The same went for Hendry, according to Johnson, claiming that Hendry sucks and that he didn’t deserve the spot that he has.

Black walked out and tried to settle Johnson down, explaining that this wasn’t the way to get where he wanted. Castle got on the mic and called Johnson a silly goose, which led to a “silly goose” chant from the crowd. Jay Briscoe then challenged Johnson to step into the ring and join the fight, so the match was changed to a three-way tag team match.

Johnson shouted at Castle at the start, and Castle flipped him off. Jay Briscoe tagged Castle in as Johnson argued with his partner, Black, on the apron. Jay took Johnson out with a big yakuza kick before laying in some fists.

Mark Briscoe came in and dished out some abuse for a couple moments until Castle tagged himself back in. Johnson couldn’t handle getting beat up, so he tried leaving the match and yelled “screw you” to both teams. Black went to talk him out of ditching the match but was taken out by The Briscoes, and from here this turned into a scramble-brawl around ringside

Black took them out with a tope suicida and later used a diving double stomp to take out a standing Jay Briscoe. When Black and Johnson finally had the match in their control, Johnson stalled to taunt and brag in Black’s direction, who’d been knocked to the floor. Johnson ate a codebreaker from Hendry, then a reverse slingblade from Castle for the win.

This was good — lots of action where everyone looked good, especially The Briscoes. Johnson looks like he’ll be a more regular player in ROH this year.

Sumie Sakai defeated Nicole Savoy

Sakai turned on Savoy on Saturday night after they lost their tag match to The Allure. Savoy accidentally kicked Sakai and cost them the match, so Sakai took her out with Smash Mouth. Tonight Sakai came out with different gear, darker colors with black boots and kneepads.

Savoy charged the ring and they went at it from the bell, but Sakai mostly punished Savoy with submissions and later a missile dropkick off the ropes. Savoy responded with a butterfly superplex off the ropes and a dragon suplex, dumping Sakai onto her neck.

These two worked super hard here, despite the relatively dead crowd. They livened up when referee Todd Sinclair had his legs between the ropes and Sakai kicked it, taking him out for a moment. She got a lot of heat for that.

Savoy used a dragon suplex with a bridging pin next, but Sinclair was still selling the rope shot, so there was no one to make the count. Sakai slipped out of the ring, grabbed a chain, and smashed Savoy with a few shots, including a double axe-handle, then landed Smash Mouth to win the match (Sinclair was back up by now).

This didn’t get the best reaction, but it was a good match. Sakai works well as a heel.

Dak Draper defeated Danhausen

This was mostly comedy. The crowd caught on and backed Danhausen early on. There was a bit too much leg-slapping for me in this. 2019 Top Prospect winner Dak Draper used some nice power moves on the smaller Danhausen, who claims to weigh 326 lbs, according to the ROH Tale of the Tape stats.

Danhausen showed off some interesting offense — lots of flying, swinging moves, running knee strikes, etc. He poured a jar of teeth into Draper’s mouth and kneed him in the face, sending the “teeth” flying. Draper ultimately won with the Magnum KO slam.

Alex Zayne defeated Bandido

This was Zayne’s first match in ROH. He blew up last summer after GCW’s Backyard Wrestling pay-per-view and has been floating around NJPW in the States and OWE for Cima overseas.

Zayne went for an insane twisting dive midway through the match but got caught up on the ropes and couldn’t stick the landing. Bandido sort of saved it, and the announcers smoothed things out on commentary. He recovered with the crowd by landing a tope con giro to the floor

Zayne was impressive and extremely creative, but it was obvious he’s still green. The smoothness between the two wasn’t there, but even still, this was entertaining. Zayne tried a number of innovative offensive moves, including what I guess we’d call a tilt-a-whirl flapjack.

Bandido used one of the crazier moves I’ve seen recently, a flipping hangman’s neckbreaker bomb from the top rope. At this point in the match, Zayne and Bandido were trading huge moves, ones that don’t have names yet. The crowd started doing “this is awesome” chants.

Zayne used a shooting star knee drop from the top, then, in a shocker, he put Bandido away clean with a straight jacket pumphandle driver for the win.

By the end of this the crowd was in love with Zayne, and they already sounded to love Bandido. The two shook hands afterwards, with most everyone in attendance on their feet. Zayne looked like he had some diehard fans in the front row, and before going to the back he autographed one of their signs. Very interesting, entertaining match.

– Out next was Shane Taylor with the Sons of Savagery. Taylor called out ROH CEO Joe Koff to follow up on the ultimatum Taylor gave Koff last night. He also mentioned that on January 31 he’d be wrestling Nick Gage for VIP Wrestling, which was intriguing. Looks as though ROH is keeping the door cracked open for cross-promotional projects in 2020.

LifeBlood (Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams) defeated Vincent & Bateman (w/ Vita Von Star and Chuckles) by DQ

Vincent and Bateman came out with Vita Von Star and Chuckles, a clown. They’re doing the Hot Topic horror gimmick that so many wrestlers are into lately.

When LifeBlood came to the ring they got into it immediately with Bateman and Vincent. LifeBlood showcased some nice double-team offense. Chuckles dragged Vincent out of the ring early in the match and it got zero reaction from the audience. The crowd sounded checked out for the most part here.

Chuckles tried going after Williams on the floor until Vincent took Williams out with a cutter onto the floor mats.

Haskins really stood out in this and worked very hard. He was maybe three times as fast as everyone in the ring. After he and Williams used a piledriver/kick bomb on Vincent, Haskins locked him in a sharpshooter and seemed like they were about to pick up the win when Chuckles interfered, hitting Haskins over the head with a block of wood. That was absolutely not what this match needed.

Williams chased the spooky heels out with a chair. Pretty weak overall, unfortunately.

Jonathan Gresham, Jay Lethal, Jeff Cobb & Dan Maff defeated Silas Young, Josh Woods, Beer City Bruiser & Brawler Milonas

Gresham and Lethal stalled before the match. They took their entrance gear off slowly, stretched, and Lethal talked some trash. A few wrestlers shook hands before the match. Gresham and Lethal took so long that The Bouncers went down to the front row and sipped a few fans’ beers.

When the match finally got underway, Gresham and Young had two nice exchanges early on, with Young actually getting the better of both. Gresham acted very frustrated with it and threw a tantrum on the floor after Woods tagged in and yolked him up a bit.

Woods took on Lethal and it had me interested in a singles bout between those two. Woods excels when he’s with other wrestlers who are great with mat work, like Lethal and Gresham.

Beer City Bruiser came in next and roughed Lethal up with a couple jabs. Cobb entered next and took Bruiser out with a high dropkick. Maff and Milonas traded hard chops, and Maff later took Milonas out with a Pounce, believe it or not.

Lethal and Gresham dragged Woods out of the ring and beat on him behind the referee’s back. Neither Lethal nor Gresham would tag Cobb or Maff into the match. In a gravelly voice, Maff screamed at Lethal to “tag his ass in,” to which Lethal denied.

Woods made a comeback late in this and took out Gresham with a gamengiri knee off the top rope, just like he did last night in Atlanta. Young did the Plunge but missed most of Gresham. Maff did a big tope suicida to the floor, then took Young out with a spear. At this point, the crowd was livelier than ever.

Cobb and Lethal brawled on the floor. Cobb was later able to pick up the win by slamming Beer City Bruiser with his Tour of the Islands finish.

Gresham and Lethal held their Tag Team titles up and taunted Young and Woods from the ring afterwards. Maff and Cobb then got into it with Lethal and Gresham, with Maff attempting to steal Lethal’s title belt before referee Todd Sinclair ordered him to give it back. Maff threw it into the ring back at Lethal, who kept yelling for his music to play before they cut to the next segment.

– They aired a quick vignette of Rhett Titus from after his match at Final Battle in Baltimore last month, where he lost to Kenny King in front of his wife and baby. He apologized backstage to his wife and told King via the camera that their feud wasn’t over yet.

– Bully Ray came out next. Ring announcer Bobby Cruise threw the mic at Ray when he called to him for it. Ray wanted to apologize to Cruise in the ring in front of everyone tonight and shake his hand to atone for attacking him last night.

Cruise got into the ring and Ray started putting him over before he face-palmed Cruise, knocking him to the mat like he did at the last show. Ray started riffing and laid into a couple down in the front row. He started talking about how he put Maria Manic through a table last night and sent her to the hospital so she wouldn’t be at the venue tonight.

Guess what? She was in the building. Manic speared Bully Ray twice before The Allure came out and distracted Manic long enough for Ray to take her out with a chair. Ray went to powerbomb Manic through a table in the corner of the ring, but Manic broke out of the hold with a low blow. “You’re not a bully, you’re a bitch,” she said.

Manic then threw Ray through the table. She got a good reaction, but I think Bobby Cruise got an even louder reaction when he got on the mic and yelled “You suck!” at a dazed Bully Ray.

Flip Gordon defeated Flamita

Short but good aerial match, as one would expect from these two flyers. It was mostly back and forth, with Flamita pulling off some impressively smooth spots. Gordon looked great as well and won this via submission with an STF.

Gordon ripped Flamita’s mask off before he left the ring.

La Faccion Ingobernable (Rush, Dragon Lee & Kenny King w/ Amy Rose) defeated Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King)

Rhett Titus was on commentary with Coleman and Riccaboni for this. Scurll, the latest addition to the ROH booking team, kicked the match off with Dragon Lee.

The unrelated Brody King and Kenny King were in next, but only for a few moments. PCO and Rush were next up, expanding on their recent program that started at Final Battle. Midway through, Kenny King and Lee suplexed Scurll on the floor while Rush whipped PCO hard into the barricade. Lee choked Scurll with a cable.

It went from a match to a bar fight outside the ring and then back to all action from that point to the finish. PCO did a couple huge somersault dives to the floor and onto the apron. La Faccion took Scurll out at the end with a double assisted-diving double stomp, with Rush and Kenny King holding Scurll up in a back suplex position while Lee spiked Scurll with aforementioned stomp.

La Faccion did one-armed push-ups together in the ring as the show faded to black.

Final thoughts —

It was another pretty good show from ROH tonight. Again, it felt like a slog at times, which was a problem with the night before as well.

Alex Zayne vs. Bandido stood out the most, but the whole show featured matches that had positive points about them, either in the ring or with new angles. Aside from Aldis and his crew’s appearance at the beginning of the show, they didn’t appear for the rest of the night.

ROH’s next event on HonorClub will be on February 9 at Free Enterprise in Baltimore, which will be free of charge to all who attend.

Six-Man Tag Team title match set for ROH Honor Reigns Supreme

Rush’s new stable is getting a Six-Man Tag Team title shot at ROH’s second show of 2020.

ROH has announced that Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) will defend their Six-Man Tag Team titles against La Faccion Ingobernable (Rush, Dragon Lee & Kenny King) at Honor Reigns Supreme. The show is taking place at Cabarrus Arena in Concord, North Carolina on Sunday, January 12.

La Faccion Ingobernable was introduced at ROH’s Final Battle Fallout show earlier this month. It was also announced that — after PCO won the ROH World Championship at Final Battle — Rush will get his rematch at Saturday Night at Center Stage in Atlanta, Georgia on Saturday, January 11. That show and Honor Reigns Supreme will air live on HonorClub.

After winning the ROH Television Championship from Shane Taylor at Final Battle, Dragon Lee will make his first title defense at Saturday Night at Center Stage. Andrew Everett is his challenger.