WWE United Kingdom special to debut this Friday

The WWE announced today that the debut of the WWE United Kingdom show will be a special airing on Friday, not Thursday night as was originally reported, this week.

Because the top two matches on the show have to do with the NXT TakeOver special on Saturday, they had to air earlier. The show will debut at 3 p.m. Friday Eastern time, which makes sense because that would be prime time in the U.K., the key market. There will be an 8 p.m. replay on Friday night.

Jim Ross and Nigel McGuinness will be doing studio voice overs of the matches taped on May 7th in Norwich, England.

Announced for the show is Tyler Bate vs. Mark Andrews for the U.K. title, and Pete Dunne vs. Trent Seven for the top contender position. WWE has already announced Bate vs. Dunne as the match for TakeOver: Chicago on May 20th. Reports were that both of these matches were excellent.

The other matches that will air will be Rich Swann & Dan Moloney vs. Brian Kendrick & TJP, and Wolfgang vs. Joseph Conners.

Fight Club PRO’s Elite Friday recap: The Elite vs. WWE UK

Good Friday was the beginning of a breakout weekend for Fight Club: PRO. In front of the largest crowd in the promotion’s history (having swapped its cozy Fixxion Warehouse venue for the more spacious Diamond Banqueting Hall), they successfully presented a genuine contender for Show of the Year with Elite Friday.

As the name suggests, this was the latest stop on Kenny Omega and The Young Bucks’ tour of the British Isles. The previous two days had seen them perform in Scotland and London, while the following day will see them cross the Irish Sea to wrestle for Over the Top Wrestling.

But it’s Wolverhampton that managed to secure the highest profile opponents for them. Fight Club: PRO is co-owned by WWE UK wrestler Trent Seven, with his WWE UK colleagues Tyler Bate and Pete Dunne also being regular fixtures for the promotion. So Wolverhampton saw a unique matchup: one of the biggest acts in New Japan going up against the three men soon to be the centerpieces of a WWE television program.

The pro wrestlers involved didn’t ignore the promotional politics. After a start that was dominated by the crowd demanding the different wrestlers stop to give them a wave (a common chant in English sporting events), The Elite got on the microphone. After mocking the Brits for signing such low-figure deals with the WWE compared to what they make independently, they went to deliver three superkicks, only for Dunne, Seven, and Bate to counter with stereo Pedigrees.

What was impressive was that was the moment when the match shifted gears as they upped the intensity of their work. The men involved didn’t need to do that, the crowd was having a good time with the comedy and chanting, but they all clearly wanted to have a great match.

There were far too many impressive spots to mention, with Bate diving over the ring apron to deliver stereo Meltzer Drivers a particular highlight. What it lacked in intensity in terms of fans caring which of the two monster babyface teams would win, it more than made up for with the sheer scale of the spectacle.

Omega would ultimately get the win, hitting the One Winged Angel on Dunne. It can’t be stressed enough, if The Young Bucks and Kenny Omega are among the best in the world, then so are the members of British Strong Style. The two teams were equal participants in a great match, with the Brits matching the New Japan stars, step for step. Omega put over the three Brits afterwards, noting how far the three had developed since he first toured the UK in 2008.

As The Elite prepared to move onto their next stop, Fight Club: PRO was also heading out. Because, for the first time, the promotion is leaving its Wolverhampton base for a national tour, with stops in Manchester and London.

Co-owner Martin Zaki spoke to us about the logistics involved: “In 2015 and 2016 we teamed up with CHIKARA and assisted them in conducting what had been an ever elusive desire of coming to the UK. Following the success of these, and also fan requests for us to return to places like Manchester and London it seemed like something we just had to do. Logistically it’s not too difficult. I really think it helps that our home is located centrally and therefore travel anywhere within the country is relatively easy. That being said, moving 30 – 40 people around the country is never going to be the simplest task.”

The gamble has more than paid off with all three shows selling out. Indeed so large was the crowd on Friday that the queue literally went around the block.  

The heart of the tour is the Dream Tag Team Invitational Tournament. All three shows feature matches as part of the tournament with the promotion bringing in internationally renowned talent to supplement their regular roster.

Zaki explained the idea behind the tournament: “For as long as I have loved independent wrestling, tag team wrestling has been a passion. However, I believe it is something that promoters generally shy away from when it comes to international teams as let’s face it, they are double the cost. We looked at the idea and just said ‘let’s do it’ but if we are going to then let’s make it ridiculous. The result is DTTI and judging by people’s reactions we certainly achieved the ridiculous.”

We saw the first two matches of the tournament on Friday. In an upset, Marty Scurll & Zack Sabre Jr. lost to The Hunter Brothers. I say an upset, but it would be fair to say that the promo work of The LDRS telegraphed the result. Both men began by berating the crowd, telling them how much they preferred wrestling in America, and promising that the forthcoming match would be over in ten seconds.

It was the perfect setup for the veteran team, who have been wrestling for over 11 years without achieving the international acclaim that younger Brits have gained, to be the underdog babyfaces. There was a lot of comedy early on, with Sabre and Scurll doing an elaborate chain wrestling sequence to prevent themselves from falling over after they had been spun around by the brothers.

The subtle-heel technical wrestling of Sabre and Scurll made for a good contrast to the high flying of The Hunter Brothers, a dynamic that played into the finish of Lee Hunter diving into a Sabre triangle choke but managing to reverse an attempted armbar into a cradle.

While the match was well-worked, it was slightly hurt by the fact that the crowd was getting tired. The promotion called an astute audible to bring forward the intermission to give the crowd a break.

The other tournament match saw Mark Andrews & Eddie Dennis defeat Jack Evans & Angelico in a fun, fast-paced match. As is to be expected from the men involved, there was plenty of high-flying action, most notably both Andrews and Angelico diving from the balconies on either side of the building in quick succession.

One of the side effects of booking a tag team tournament over three days is that you have to find things for the international competitors to do in the days they’re not competing. Rey Fenix & the former Pentagon Jr. will be facing Pete Dunne & Sami Callihan in Manchester, but in Wolverhampton the Lucha Brothers fought each other.

This was everything that you would hope for from the two, with Pentagon winning a match that successfully combined high flying and intricate matwork as only the best lucha libre can. Pentagon’s star quality and ability to work the crowd is something to see. If he can ever fully escape his Lucha Underground contract, he could easily be the breakout star that WWE is looking for.

Speaking of Callihan, he won an enjoyable three-way dance against Shane Strickland and Lio Rush, pinning the latter with a package piledriver. Surprisingly, considering that Callihan is something of a regular for the promotion, it was Rush that got by far the biggest reaction of the three.

The match was cleverly constructed, with all three clearly going out of their way to avoid the cliched format of one person laying down in a corner for a prolonged period while the other two wrestle. Instead they successfully performed intricate three-way exchanges without ever getting lost despite wrestling at a quick pace. That said, as the match built to its finish, it did begin to conform to follow the standard format more.

Of course, not every month will see Fight Club: PRO bring the world’s hottest indie wrestlers to Wolverhampton. With this in mind, the promotion shrewdly used the shows to showcase their new champion, Travis Banks, in a series of spotlight matches.

I feel that Banks is a future superstar, and Zaki agrees. “His intensity, his drive, his passion is incredible,” Zaki said. “He truly deserves every success that comes to him. He has played a huge role, possibly bigger than he realizes, in Fight Club: PRO achieving the recognition it does right now.”

One of the most impressive things about Banks is how he shrewdly manages his career. I spoke to him for Fighting Spirit Magazine, and a key thing he stresses to young wrestlers is the need to build contacts. One of those contacts helped him enter Fight Club: PRO.

“Prior to Trav coming to the UK we were contacted by Kyle O’Reilly, vouching for him and asking if we could look to perhaps book him at some point,” Zaki said. “Right here we knew he would be good. It did not take him long to prove that he wasn’t just good, he was great.”

He had a superb match on Friday with Will Ospreay, proving himself equal to one of the best in the business. The story of the match was simple but effective, with “The Aerial Assassin” landing several spectacular moves on the champion before wilting in the face of the onslaught from “The Kiwi Buzzsaw.”

Banks’ work has genuine physicality, and is a world away from the more junior heavyweight style that we often see from Ospreay. His fiery comebacks were particularly impressive, with his facial expressions and strong style offense conveying real intensity. He would win by submitting Ospreay with the crossface.

His next defense will be against Mark Haskins, who cemented his (previously announced) contender status by winning the show’s opener. Although there was no ladder, this was very much in the style of the multi-man ladder matches that often open WrestleMania.

This was all action, with the wrestlers’ ability to deliver big spot after big spot with no transitions enhanced by there being so many people involved. What had been billed as a four-way dance was supplemented by two surprise additions: Jimmy Havoc and Nixon Newell. The latter was a genuine surprise considering that the promotion’s last two shows had been built around celebrating her career before she goes to NXT.

Newell is yet another example of how the argument that hardcore fans refuse to accept clean-cut babyfaces is nonsense. Much like Bayley, she’s a girl next door who likes pop music but is adored by the predominately male crowd because she’s great at what she does. I’m not a fan of intergender matches, but there’s no denying that she was every bit the equal of the men in the crowd. She not only moves around the ring incredibly smoothly, but has genuine aptitude for delivering high-flying moves. She should become a huge star over in America.

Fight Club: PRO Elite Friday was one of the best shows you are likely to see this year. It was a deep card, with genuine superstars of either the British or international indie scene in every match, and they all pushed themselves to deliver great action.

As Zaki explained to me: “We never stress this but I feel it is subconsciously known and understood, if you come to Fight Club: PRO then we expect your best and we expect you to give it all for that crowd, in return you will be given the freedom to express yourself as you wish with our full trust and support.” Everyone involved sure made the most of that freedom.

Will Cooling writes for Fighting Spirit Magazine, the UK’s biggest and best full-color pro wrestling and mixed martial arts newsstand magazine. This month, he looks at how pro wrestling has failed to participate in Television’s Golden Age and why the bloom has come off the rose for NXT.

My Favorite Wrestler (This Week): Styles, Ospreay, Bayley, more

Welcome to My Favorite Wrestler (This Week), the new weekly column where the Wrestling Observer team chooses exactly what the title says: their favorite wrestler of the week!

Our criteria is based on anything a wrestler has done in a given week. We may make our decision based on their work in the ring or as a promo, because of an entertaining appearance on a podcast or something interesting they said in an interview, for an appearance they made in other media, like John Cena on SNL, for a tweet they sent out or something they posted on Instagram, anything really.

This week’s panel —

Here’s our picks! Who’s yours?

The Kotatsu table —

By Zach Dominello

What a week to start this column. What with New Japan’s New Beginning, to WWE’s Elimination Chamber match, to the Women’s Championship match on Raw, to the worst thing to happen to TV friendships since Scrubs went off the air, I find myself hard-pressed to choose a favorite wrestler this week.

I was in two minds, well three actually, trying to choose between Tetsuya Naito, Michael Elgin, and Hiromu Takahashi, but then I watched DDT “DRAMATIC NERIMA THE FIGHTER 2017” on DDT Universe, and any doubt I had just disappeared. My favorite wrestler this week is the current DDT Iron Man Heavymetalweight Champion (though knowing that title, it’ll probably change hands, or in this case legs, ten times before I finish this sentence): the Kotatsu table.

Yes, a table currently holds a title in DDT. Watching a table interfere in a match, have a promo cut on it by a wrestler who then beats it down and tries to steal its title, only to be stopped by another wrestler who also tries to steal its title, but then the two wrestlers take each other out and leave the Kotatsu standing tall in the ring, is really quite something. Only in DDT.

Austin Aries —

By Paul Fontaine

My favorite wrestler for this week didn’t even wrestle but that doesn’t matter. It’s Austin Aries, and if you’re not watching him on 205 Live…well, you’re really missing out.

The highlight for me, and what makes him my favorite of the week was simply one comment after a Rich Swann promo (that was also pretty good). Swann was taunting his opponent, Noam Dar, and finished his promo by saying, “I’m dedicating this match to the lovely and talented…Alicia FAAAAAWWWWWWWWWKKKKKKSSSS,” mimicking the way Dar says Alicia Fox’s name.

Aries responded by saying, “What did he say she does?” It doesn’t take much to entertain me, but that was it for me this week!

AJ Styles —

By Bryan Rose

My favorite wrestler this week is none other than AJ Styles. This was the week that I realized just how big of an asset he is to the SmackDown brand. I don’t know one match so far this year of his that was bad — he’s consistently awesome, and he proved to be no different this week in the SmackDown main event.

It was one of the better matches I’ve seen on the show since the brand split, full of spectacular action. And this follows his great performance in the Elimination Chamber from Sunday! Just a tremendous wrestler and is the first person who comes to mind as my favorite wrestler of this week.

Trent Seven —

By Will Cooling

My favorite wrestler this week has to be Trent Seven. I felt the owner of pro wrestling’s finest beard was underserved by the WWE UK Championship tournament due to his elimination at the quarterfinal stage. He deserved better than to be lost in the shuffle. Seven has genuine charisma, with his unique look and mannerisms allowing him to instantly grab peoples’ attention.

Despite being larger than the average UK wrestler, he is able to keep the pace with smaller rivals, combining athleticism and power. Plus, did I mention how great that beard is? So it was reassuring to see him get the chance to showcase what he can do on NXT against his (*cough* tag team *cough*) partner Tyler Bate.

Obviously the WWE imposes limitations on what is and isn’t possible, but Seven seized the chance to remind people that he’s every bit as good as the WWE UK title tournament’s final four.

Will Ospreay —

By Alan Boon

My favorite wrestler this week — and for many of the weeks over the past two years — is Will Ospreay. There are times when I can’t believe it’s the same guy I didn’t get the first time I saw him but he never fails to impress with his timing, athleticism, innovation, and sheer talent.

This week, in the space of 36 hours (and with a flight from Osaka to London in between) he fought in three completely different matches. The first, against Katsuyori Shibata, on New Japan’s New Beginning in Osaka, was a hard-hitting grudge match, the culmination of weeks of them going at each other with all the brutality usually associated with Shibata. The second, also part of a feud, was the opener at WCPW’s True Destiny iPPV, where he and Ricochet had to come up with a completely different type of match to the one they’d usually have because the top rope broke in the first few minutes.

And finally, about an hour later, he pulled double-duty to win the WCPW Tag Team titles with Scotty Wainwright, in a car crash of a ladder match, with stunts and bumps aplenty. He’s got something special, alright, and we’re only just finding out how special.

Bayley —

By Joseph Currier

Monday night wasn’t the right time for Bayley to win her first Raw Women’s Championship, but none of that really mattered to me as it happened. Bayley’s title win represented the best of professional wrestling. And while the timing could’ve been better, the moment was perfect in a way that WWE rarely ever manages to achieve.

Bayley’s promotion to the main roster had been neither an overwhelming success nor a failure up until Monday night. She was a valuable part of the Raw women’s division, though often was secondary to Charlotte and Sasha Banks’ title feud.

I’m of the belief that Bayley can be a star above anyone else in the women’s division. While Banks and Becky Lynch have a real connection with the audience, Bayley’s character and her genuine personality allow her to stand above everyone else. Whether she can truly be the star that she was in NXT remains to be seen, but her Raw main event against Charlotte was the most obvious example since her promotion that Bayley is translating with the WWE audience.

The actual match was secondary to the moment, but Charlotte and Bayley put on a great showing that is a legitimate contender for the best WWE main roster women’s match ever. The finish in particular was excellent and used outside interference to elevate what was already a stellar match.

Bayley may not hold the title for long. And we’ll see if WWE can recapture the atmosphere from Monday night when she wins the title again, whether that’s at WrestleMania, SummerSlam, or some other destination. But Monday night was perfect, and Bayley is an obvious choice for my favorite wrestler this week.

Chris Jericho —

By Mike DellaCamera

My favorite wrestler this week is one who didn’t even wrestle and that wrestler is Chris Jericho.

After being a part of one of, if not, THE best segments in the last 5-10 years of Raw, Jericho continues to prove that there has never been anyone like him. The amount of characters he has played is equal parts astonishing and impressive. From a cruiserweight in the halcyon days of WCW, to the top-knot wearing troll version of Jericho, the iconic Y2J version, the suit wearing “Best in the World at What he Does,” and (my personal favorite, and the most recent edition) the devastated best friend.

We all knew what was coming Monday, it wasn’t exactly the most shocking turn of all time, but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t absolutely crushing. When Jericho dropped the over-the-top shtick and told Kevin Owens that working with him was the best time of his life, and then called him his brother? My grinch heart grew three full sizes. And when he saw his name on the list? That same grinch heart shattered into a million tiny pieces.

Luke Harper —

By Ryan Frederick

My favorite wrestler this week is Luke Harper. Harper is finally getting some good momentum behind him from the fans and turned in his best singles performance against Randy Orton on Sunday at Elimination Chamber.

While he didn’t wrestle on SmackDown this week, he let his presence be felt when he attacked new WWE Champion Bray Wyatt (who was also a contender for my pick this week), laying him out with a superkick, prior to Wyatt’s triple threat match on Tuesday. It’s nice to see Harper get that push as he’s an excellent worker, and I hope it’s a sign of big things to come with him.

WWE NXT results: Tyler Bate vs. Trent Seven for the UK title

The Big News: Tyler Bate successfully defended the WWE UK Championship in the main event, defeating Trent Seven.

The Medium News: The Authors of Pain, DIY, and The Revival continue down their path towards an eventual three-way collision.

The Little Beaver-sized News: Billie Kay & Peyton Royce improved to 250-2 in their ongoing feud with Liv Morgan, this time winning a tag team match.

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NXT Tag Team Champions The Authors of Pain defeated Garrison Spears & Lance Anoa’i

The new champs attacked their foes from the start and it was a complete squash match. They debuted a new move where they both used a Death Valley Driver into the turnbuckles and picked up the win with The Last Chapter.

Akam and Rezar gave their fallen foes the Super Collider after the match. I couldn’t understand Nigel McGuinness’ introduction of the opponents. I thought he called Anoa’i “Ron Senoa,” but according to closed captioning, it was Lance Anoa’i.

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We got the Tyler Bate video package that they have aired at least four times already.

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Shinsuke Nakamura is training to come back from his knee injury.

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Billie Kay & Peyton Royce defeated Ember Moon & Liv Morgan

The ongoing feud between Liv Morgan and the evil Australian ladies continued in this tag match. Morgan beat Billie Kay last week in spite of interference by Royce. Morgan was challenged to find a partner and she did in Ember Moon.

The heels got the heat when Moon was on the middle rope, but due to shenanigans the referee was distracted by Morgan, so Kay and Royce yanked Moon off the ropes. The heat on Moon didn’t last too long, as she was able to make the tag to Morgan, who ran wild on Royce.

A Pier Six brawl broke out. Kay booted Moon off the apron, and pinned Morgan after a double team knee to the head.

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We got a recap in the ongoing saga between Tye Dillinger and SAnitY, which covered the entire show last week.

Andrea D’Marco interviewed Roderick Strong and No Way Jose about why they sided with Dillinger. Strong and Jose basically said they are behind Dillinger because a four-on-one beatdown is not fair, and if SAnitY isn’t stopped they won’t settle with just beating Dillinger and will go after the entire roster.

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The former NXT Tag Team Champions, DIY, were out next for a promo. They thanked the fans for naming them Tag Team of the Year before turning their attention to The Authors of Pain. Gargano said in San Antonio they saw doubt in AOP’s eyes, and on that night DIY may have been beaten, but they weren’t broken. Now they want their title rematch.

Paul Ellering came out and said their match would be in two weeks. DIY wanted it now, so The Revival ran in from out of nowhere and took out DIY! Revival laid them out with the Shatter Machine and ran away before AOP ran in to the ring.

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Next up was the Trent Seven video package we have seen three or four times.

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A video package aired for the returning Kassius Ohno.

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William Regal announced that next week will be a triple threat match with Liv Morgan, Ember Moon, and Peyton Royce. The winner will face Asuka in two weeks for the Women’s Championship.

Afterwards it was also announced Pete Dunne would wrestle Mark Andrews next week.

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WWE United Kingdom Champion Tyler Bate defeated Trent Seven to retain his title

This was a battle between regular tag team partners. Bate, of course, won the United Kingdom Championship tournament, while Seven went down in defeat in the quarterfinals to Wolfgang.

The match started with a series of lock-ups. The first time Seven backed Bate into the ropes and twirled Bate’s mustache. The second time Bate backed Seven into the ropes and twirled Seven’s mustache. The match started slowly and built up into a very good match.

Nigel McGuinness encouraged them on commentary to start taking risks and, almost as if they heard him, the match picked up from there. Bate did a beautiful dive over the top rope and Seven came back with a falcon arrow.

Seven went for the Seven Star Lariat (Rainmaker), but Bate ducked it and used his airplane spin. Seven hit a powerbomb, which turned into a single leg crab when Bate kicked out. The champ got out of that, but got hit with a Seven Star Lariat for a near fall.

Bate came back with an exploder suplex off the top rope, but Seven kicked out. Seven hit a spinning back fist, but Bate hit a rolling kick and the Tyler Driver ’97 for the win. The tag team partners shook hands and embraced after the match.

This was an excellent match and more than worth checking out on the Network. That does it for this week. Thank you all for reading, and until next week, remember to say your vitamins and take your prayers!

Dunne, Bate & Seven off of wXw show due to WWE commitments

More WWE contracted wrestlers in the UK have had a change in their schedules, with German promotion wXw the most recent to be affected by talent being pulled from appearances.

wXw announced in a press release on Monday that Pete Dunne, Tyler Bate, and Trent Seven are off of their show in London on January 28th. That’s the same day that Dunne, Seven, and Mark Andrews were scheduled to appear on a live episode of the “Working a Resthold” podcast before WWE contractual obligations left them unable to participate.

From wXw’s press release:

“We received information that Tyler Bate, Trent Seven and Pete Dunne are unable to compete for wXw in London on January 28th due to WWE commitments.”

“We have received numerous inquiries regarding the future situation of the three wrestlers in question. We have contacted WWE about this matter and are currently waiting on their response. Once we have received further news, we are going to update you on this subject.”

Bate & Seven have been replaced by the London Riots in a tag title match against A4. Jody Fleisch will now face Travis Banks instead of Dunne.

In what could be related to the wrestlers being pulled from their appearances this weekend, Dave Meltzer reported that some of the UK tournament competitors are being flown by WWE to San Antonio for Royal Rumble weekend.

PROGRESS Wrestling has yet to announce if their show on January 29th will be affected by the changes. Dunne has been set to defend the PROGRESS Championship against Jimmy Havoc in the main event, while Bate & Seven are the promotion’s tag team champions.

WWE pulls more UK talent from appearances

Following Thursday’s news of contracted WWE UK talents being pulled from FloSlam broadcasts, Friday saw more announcements of wrestlers being removed from scheduled appearances as restrictions regarding where they’re allowed to work are put in place.

The “Working a Resthold” podcast announced that Pete Dunne, Mark Andrews, and Trent Seven would no longer be appearing on their live podcast in London on January 28th prior to wXw’s show later that night.

The podcast posted, “Unfortunately, yesterday afternoon, Scott Andrews was informed that due to their new WWE contractual obligations, Trent Seven, Pete Dunne and Mark Andrews are now unable to participate in the show. On behalf of myself, Dannii and Marianne, we’d like to wish all three the very best for the future and would like to thank them for their professionalism.”

They have updated their lineup with Eddie Dennis, Chris Brookes, Doug Williams, Jody Fleisch, and Johnny Storm now joining Marty Scurll and Ryan Smile.

Despite William Regal initially claiming that the signed UK talent would face “zero restrictions” regarding where they’re allowed to work aside from dates where WWE needs them and some places that have contracts that would present a conflict of interest, it quickly became clear that wouldn’t be the case.

WWE has developed relationships with ICW, PROGRESS, and OTT, with Dave Meltzer reporting in this week’s edition of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter that a deal for ICW events to appear on the Network is in place along with the possibility of more to come.

UPDATE: In what could possibly be related to Dunne, Andrews, and Seven being pulled from the podcast, Meltzer notes that WWE is bringing some of the UK talent to San Antonio next week for Royal Rumble weekend.

Meltzer also reports that contracted talents will be permitted to perform for certain promotions but the events cannot be distributed (televised, streamed, transmitted or taped) unless authorized. It is said that all talent was told this before signing deals, and is in all of their contracts.

The full What Culture interview with Regal where he spoke about there not being restrictions on talent (which happens at 1:30) is available to watch below: