BT-3G
Feb 1, 2020 5:16:02 GMT -5
Post by OrochiGeese on Feb 1, 2020 5:16:02 GMT -5
"The Randolph Report"
Event: "BT-3G"
Date: Saturday, February 1, 2020
Location: "Peter Venkman Memorial Arena" in Westchester, New York.
We have a surprise for you tonight. What was originally planned as one of our usual Saturday live events is actually the unexpected return of a classic UBL project. I’ve been told that this will be yet another feature of the ”Dimensional” stream of the Collider Tour. We’re gonna take it down to the ring where Sergeant Drake Yoshida is standing with a microphone.
[Drake:] “Hello everyone and welcome to the third generation of Basic Training.
Wow!! That is huge! The crowd is on their feet and loving the return of our rookie training system!
The BattleTron displays this familiar logo!
[Drake:] “Here is the trainer and referee for this program and the Front Lines roster, Coach Randy Everett.”
Drake shakes Randy’s hand and passes him the microphone.
[Randy:] “Atten-tion! When I call your name, come down in an orderly fashion!”
Wow, this guy is big on discipline. But given all that happens around here, that is probably a good thing.
[Randy:] “Gerulf Sieger”
[Randy:] “Ryuji Bansho”
[Randy:] “Nerval Pithory”
[Randy:] “Glenn Dyon”
[Randy:] “Magog”
No one comes down to the ring and Randy sighs then raises his microphone again.
[Randy:] “Magog... the Mad"
That did it. Here he comes.
Every class has got a troublemaker, don’t they?
[Randy:] “Javier Martez”
Okay, judging by that three-dimensional bird-flippage, we have two troublemakers!
Drake then takes the microphone again:
[Drake:] "It is one of the greatest honors of my career to introduce the new Field Leader in charge..."
Drake pauses, as if to fully absorb the moment, and then smiles as he says:
[Drake:] "Barton Miller"
Wow! The crowd is deafening right now! Look at that reaction and can I say how deserved it is? Barton is a legend but what’s even more important is to see a man walking after the spinal injuries he incurred last year. That is a real miracle of modern science as far as I’m concerned, not the Monroe mutants. Welcome back, Barton!
Drake hands Barton a microphone and then shows an exceedingly rare display of emotion by actually hugging him! I don’t think I’ve ever seen Drake hug anyone…though he has learned to not flinch when Jean hugs him.
As a bonus, I transcribed everything exactly how Barton said it.
[Barton:] “Thank you. I am truly humbled and hope that my performance lives up to this reaction. This is not the first time I’ve come back from an injury, but it’s the most meaningful due to what I had to face and what I am returning to.
It’s also fitting that Drake is the one to give me this opportunity since he was the one that signed me to UBL 25 years ago and then brought me over to the states when Geese bought this place. Now he’s the one to hand me the pen to write the next chapter of my life. And I’m ready for it. I’m feeling healthy and at peace with my decision to retire.
Everything that happened in the past year is history. It is now time to shape the future and it’s standing here in this ring. These six men have the potential to be UBL Champions. All fans are welcome to attend Basic Training sessions in the UBL Dojo led by myself and Coach Everett. I will be writing periodic reports of those sessions and putting them on the website for people to read. Eventually they will debut on live shows and perhaps even make it on official Dimensional shows before the Tour ends. Who knows, maybe two of them can tolerate each other and make a tag team title run at JET and Naja!”
Barton smiles and then hands the microphone to Drake.
[Drake:] “Although all of these men are considered rookies, they are not without training. The experience and abilities they possess vary but all of them have stepped foot in a ring before. We want to show their current capabilities so you can see their eventual growth. So tonight we will be pairing these six off to wrestle three matches with a 10-minute time limit. Since this is a training program, they will remain at ringside to watch each other's matches."
Everyone leaves the ring and stands on the arena floor except for Barton and Coach Everett. Drake walks to the timekeeper's table and sits down, getting a front row seat. Barton points to Nerval and Javier who both come back into the ring. Barton then leaves the ring to join Drake. Coach Everett is left to referee the match.
Match 1: Nerval Pithory vs. Javier Martez
In a brief tale of the tape, Nerval has the advantage in power but gives up considerable speed to Javier. And that exact dynamic is the story of the first few minutes of the match, with Nerval playing chase but Javier eluding him with his incredible agility. Martez adds literal insult to injury with his rudo behavior and taunts as well. While Coach attempts to stay neutral, you can tell he dislikes the unorthodox and heelish techniques that Martez is so adept at.
However, Nerval is not letting the taunting behavior get to him and finally manages to turn the tide when Javier attempts to run into the post with a back elbow to Nerval's face. Nerval blocks it and then lifts Javier high in the air with a vertical suplex…which he proceeds to hold for about five full seconds! During that time, it appears that Javier is shaking his right leg, maybe altitude sickness? Nerval finally drops Javier and wow…he suplexed Javier out of his boots...literally, as one fell off during the suplex! The crowd erupts for this but before Nerval has a chance to pin, he notices the loose boot. He walks over to return the boot to Javier only for Javier to suddenly try to roll-up Nerval for the pin! Coach shrugs and counts it, getting half a second away from a three count before Nerval kicks out. Javier looks a bit frustrated, as if this was a planned gambit that didn't fully pay off. But it sure got close. I don't know whether to praise Martez's machinations or question Nerval's naivete but the crowd got its first near fall of this Basic Training class and it was a wonky one, at that.
However, Nerval still has control due to the lingering effects of that huge suplex and we finally get to see what he can do One of those things is put together fierce combinations stemming from the frustration of the early part of the match.
He appears to believe this match is over and starts setting up for a powerbomb. He hoists Javier high in the air, only for Javier to spit in Nerval's face! This causes Nerval to loose grasp of Javier, who lands on his feet, kicks Nerval in the stomach, and uses a tights-pulling piledriver to put Nerval down for the win.
Maybe when Javier gets to the main roster, he'll upgrade to a mist the audience can see better.
Nerval Pithory (X) [Tights Pulling Piledriver - 9:05] (O) Javier Martez
Coach Everett instructs them both to wait outside, and makes sure an angry Nerval is on the other side of the ring from a posturing and celebrating Javier. Ryuji Bansho and Magog are called for the next match.
Ryuji gets on the apron, then flips over the top rope, rolls once on the ground, and sits up with both hands held high. As he soaks in the crowd adulation, Magog climbs over the top rope and seemingly begins to try to detach it from the corner post. Coach quickly runs over to get him to stop, with Magog yelling out "supplies!" as we see Drake and Barton speaking under their breath a little nervously. Drake Yoshida leaves his seat and comes into the ring, seemingly wanting to observe/patrol this match more closely. So it looks like we're set to have this next encounter now without any hoarding.
Match 2: Ryuji Bansho vs. Magog
The speed vs. strength advantage that we saw last match was even more exaggerated here. Magog had no hope of even laying his hands on Ryuji for the first five minutes of the match. However, the flip side of this battle was that Ryuji couldn't knock Magog off of his feet, despite hitting him with every move in his arsenal that didn't require some kind of preparation. In fact, given just how big Ryuji's speed advantage was here, it may have been prudent for him to have slowed down just a bit and stopped peppering Magog with low-intensity moves. Even a few seconds more wind-up before his attacks would have been more impactful and likely not caught by Magog.
But Ryuji seemed content to run, and slide under, Magog in an attempt to quickly knock him off balance. This was to no avail. Magog's oafish attempts to reach for Ryuji also led to nothing concrete. On the plus side, a match like this gives Coach and Barton a lot of room for improvement to work with both men. It's clear each one of them possess great physical assets but they need to find a way to implement a workable strategy.
Eventually, Ryuji got fed off and realized he was losing the crowd due to this stalemate. He ran and jumped to the top turnbuckle then goaded Magog, who slowly ran to him with his outstretched arms. Ryuji smiled then hopped to the apron as Magog slammed into the post. Ryuji then attempted to trip Magog with a foot sweep. But rather than fall over, Magog tumbled backward a little. Ryuji once again jumped onto the top turnbuckle and launched himself off of it, flying about 1/3 of the way across the ring and landed on Magog's shoulders. From the looks of it, Ryuji was attempting a swinging hurracanrana but his momentum plus Magog's caused them both to tumble over the top rope! The fans gasp but neither man landed dangerously. Although they are both clearly worse for the wear, we fortunately avoided injuries on this first night. As Drake nervously starts the outside count, Magog is the first to get up around the five second mark. He slowly rolls into the ring. Ryuji is still down but the crowd's applause and chants for him energize his return to his feet. He runs and slides into the ring to beat the 20 count, and manages to continue to slide under Magog.
However, Magog had this "under the legs" move scouted from before. He grabs Ryuji around the neck and starts to lift him up into what I imagined would be a choke. But Ryuji jumps along with the lift to vault higher than Magog expected and beyond his grip. As Ryuji drops from an altitude approaching 10 feet in the air, he grabs Magog's head with his legs and sends him down with a gravity-assisted frankensteiner!
There's only about 10 seconds left but that is still enough time for Drake to count the pin.
Ryuji Bansho (O) ["Bansho-off" - 9:50] (X) Magog
Wow, I'll give it to Ryuji, he knows how to close a match in style. That was the most dramatic win of the night so far! The fans are loving that finish, especially given how he recovered after that earlier crash and burn. Ryuji thrusts his hands up in victory, clearly soaking in the crowd's adulation. For his part, once Magog (fortunately) got up, he was in good spirits. He was no worse for the wear and clapped his hand along with the applause. Yes, I said hand singular, as he literally just clapped his right hand together.
It was awkward. Let's...let's move on.
For our intermission tonight, vintage and newly released “Basic Training” t-shirts, posters, and tote bags are ready at the merchandise stand and sells out within minutes. "Chrome" t-shirts are also a hot item with Kazuo's return to the UBL.
Drake decides to stay in the ring so that Coach can talk with Barton about the last two matches and be able to better observe our final match. And that is between Glenn Dyon and Gerulf Sieger. This isn't the first time I've heard the name of Gerulf Sieger. He trained at the same Dojo that Tetsu did when he was first starting out, before Matsuki Holdings came a'calling. I'm already sensing a different attitude but I can only assume his fundamentals are solid. I don't know as much about Glenn but he seems to be one of the older rookie recruits that UBL has ever received. He also appears to be incredibly focused. Each man gets into the ring for our third match and final match for tonight.
Match 3: Glenn Dyon vs. Gerulf Sieger
There is a feeling out process but it is much more strategic than the haphazard clash of styles and physical attributes that we saw in the previous two matches. Sieger is scouting Glenn's decision to use his speed and lateral movement by testing him with middle kicks and feigned amateur takedowns. Glenn is measuring Sieger's distance and attempting to gauge his patterns by allowing him to deliver some kicks unchecked. It does appear those kicks are starting to take a toll but the crowd gasps when Glenn suddenly delivers a punch with a downward arc right onto Sieger's thigh, causing him to wince and hop backward. It seems Glenn figured his pattern out and showed his ability to counter. The crowd is getting into this.
Sieger tries a different tactic this time, feigning a quicker kick to the shins. Glenn doesn't fall for it. Sieger launches a real one this time, hitting Glenn, who shrugs it off. Sieger feigns yet another, but holds his kick in the air, then goes back to Glenn's midsection. Glenn attempts to punch it again but Sieger quickly strafes his leg right through Glenn's arm. This allows Sieger to balance his right leg on Glenn, before spinning and taking Glenn down face first with a sweeping scissor hold. Sieger rolls onto Glenn's back and attempts an elbow right between Glenn's shoulders, but Glenn already reached his arms back in anticipation and grabbed Sieger's arm, twisting it with a very unorthodox submission move. But Sieger is able to free himself by using his other arm to elbow Glenn in the back. Sieger rolls off of Glenn and they both get up.
We're about six minutes into the match. Sieger signals for Glenn to try something but Glenn does not seem interested in doing so. I think he prefers to counter his opponent's attacks. Sieger nods, understanding his role as offense in this chess match, and offers a test of strength. Glenn actually smiles at this, goading on Sieger even more. Sieger has the clear height advantage here but that is immediately neutralized by Glenn's superior strength. Sieger manages to break one of his arms free, twists Glenn's other arm, and then drops down with his knee planted under Glenn's face. This provides the first significant advantage that either of these competitors have had in this match and Sieger is poised to advance it.
Sieger immediately applies a camel clutch, and uses his legs to tuck Glenn's arms in, like a butterfly. When it seems apparent that Glenn won't give up, Sieger falls backward, turns both of them upside down, and attempts a pinfall. The sudden attempt caught Glenn by surprise but he kicks out in time. Sieger picks Glenn up and hits a roundhouse shotei, spinning Glenn around. Rather than fight the momentum, Glenn leans into it to land a blistering roundhouse kick!
Glenn covers for the pin but Sieger gets his shoulder up at the last millisecond!! Still, Glenn finally has control. But he notices Barton on the outside talking with the time keeper. I don't think we have much to go before this match is called. However, with Sieger down, Glenn isn't able to counter anything. He looks frustrated but picks Sieger up, hoping he'll mount another attack. He gives Sieger some time to collect himself but that isn't working. Sieger is still a little cloudy from that roundhouse kick so Glenn smacks him across the face. This doesn't seem intended as a show of disrespect but rather to wake Sieger up from his stupor. That being said, Javier seemed to enjoy it as he's laughing, further angering Nerval.
I'm not sure how aware Sieger is but his instincts take over and he forces a clinch in the middle of the ring. Glenn attempts a hip throw but Sieger hooks his leg and arm on to Glenn, blocking the move! Sieger elbows Glenn in the face, then pushes his body into a suplex position. Sieger lifts then drops Glenn with a shouten kai!!
The crowd gasps but right before Sieger can cover Glenn, Drake calls for the bell. The time limit has been reached!
Glenn Dyon (-) [Time Limit Draw - 10:00] (-) Gerulf Sieger
Wow, what a match!! Sure, you could say Gerulf would have claimed the victory if we had a few seconds more, but what if Glenn had truly pressed the advantage that he had after the kick rather than wait for Gerulf to attack? I don't know but this match raised even more questions for Barton and Coach Everett!
Barton gets back into the ring and raises the hands of both Gerulf and Glenn, once he recovers. Coach Everett calls the rest of the class into the ring, with Nerval still separated from Javier. Barton claps for all of the wrestlers and thanks the crowd. We fade out as everyone celebrates the new Basic Training class of UBL.
(Note: We are contractually obligated to mention that BT-3G is not a wireless network for Matsuki Mobile)
Event: "BT-3G"
Date: Saturday, February 1, 2020
Location: "Peter Venkman Memorial Arena" in Westchester, New York.
We have a surprise for you tonight. What was originally planned as one of our usual Saturday live events is actually the unexpected return of a classic UBL project. I’ve been told that this will be yet another feature of the ”Dimensional” stream of the Collider Tour. We’re gonna take it down to the ring where Sergeant Drake Yoshida is standing with a microphone.
[Drake:] “Hello everyone and welcome to the third generation of Basic Training.
Wow!! That is huge! The crowd is on their feet and loving the return of our rookie training system!
The BattleTron displays this familiar logo!
[Drake:] “Here is the trainer and referee for this program and the Front Lines roster, Coach Randy Everett.”
Drake shakes Randy’s hand and passes him the microphone.
[Randy:] “Atten-tion! When I call your name, come down in an orderly fashion!”
Wow, this guy is big on discipline. But given all that happens around here, that is probably a good thing.
[Randy:] “Gerulf Sieger”
[Randy:] “Ryuji Bansho”
[Randy:] “Nerval Pithory”
[Randy:] “Glenn Dyon”
[Randy:] “Magog”
No one comes down to the ring and Randy sighs then raises his microphone again.
[Randy:] “Magog... the Mad"
That did it. Here he comes.
Every class has got a troublemaker, don’t they?
[Randy:] “Javier Martez”
Okay, judging by that three-dimensional bird-flippage, we have two troublemakers!
Drake then takes the microphone again:
[Drake:] "It is one of the greatest honors of my career to introduce the new Field Leader in charge..."
Drake pauses, as if to fully absorb the moment, and then smiles as he says:
[Drake:] "Barton Miller"
Wow! The crowd is deafening right now! Look at that reaction and can I say how deserved it is? Barton is a legend but what’s even more important is to see a man walking after the spinal injuries he incurred last year. That is a real miracle of modern science as far as I’m concerned, not the Monroe mutants. Welcome back, Barton!
Drake hands Barton a microphone and then shows an exceedingly rare display of emotion by actually hugging him! I don’t think I’ve ever seen Drake hug anyone…though he has learned to not flinch when Jean hugs him.
As a bonus, I transcribed everything exactly how Barton said it.
[Barton:] “Thank you. I am truly humbled and hope that my performance lives up to this reaction. This is not the first time I’ve come back from an injury, but it’s the most meaningful due to what I had to face and what I am returning to.
It’s also fitting that Drake is the one to give me this opportunity since he was the one that signed me to UBL 25 years ago and then brought me over to the states when Geese bought this place. Now he’s the one to hand me the pen to write the next chapter of my life. And I’m ready for it. I’m feeling healthy and at peace with my decision to retire.
Everything that happened in the past year is history. It is now time to shape the future and it’s standing here in this ring. These six men have the potential to be UBL Champions. All fans are welcome to attend Basic Training sessions in the UBL Dojo led by myself and Coach Everett. I will be writing periodic reports of those sessions and putting them on the website for people to read. Eventually they will debut on live shows and perhaps even make it on official Dimensional shows before the Tour ends. Who knows, maybe two of them can tolerate each other and make a tag team title run at JET and Naja!”
Barton smiles and then hands the microphone to Drake.
[Drake:] “Although all of these men are considered rookies, they are not without training. The experience and abilities they possess vary but all of them have stepped foot in a ring before. We want to show their current capabilities so you can see their eventual growth. So tonight we will be pairing these six off to wrestle three matches with a 10-minute time limit. Since this is a training program, they will remain at ringside to watch each other's matches."
Everyone leaves the ring and stands on the arena floor except for Barton and Coach Everett. Drake walks to the timekeeper's table and sits down, getting a front row seat. Barton points to Nerval and Javier who both come back into the ring. Barton then leaves the ring to join Drake. Coach Everett is left to referee the match.
Match 1: Nerval Pithory vs. Javier Martez
In a brief tale of the tape, Nerval has the advantage in power but gives up considerable speed to Javier. And that exact dynamic is the story of the first few minutes of the match, with Nerval playing chase but Javier eluding him with his incredible agility. Martez adds literal insult to injury with his rudo behavior and taunts as well. While Coach attempts to stay neutral, you can tell he dislikes the unorthodox and heelish techniques that Martez is so adept at.
However, Nerval is not letting the taunting behavior get to him and finally manages to turn the tide when Javier attempts to run into the post with a back elbow to Nerval's face. Nerval blocks it and then lifts Javier high in the air with a vertical suplex…which he proceeds to hold for about five full seconds! During that time, it appears that Javier is shaking his right leg, maybe altitude sickness? Nerval finally drops Javier and wow…he suplexed Javier out of his boots...literally, as one fell off during the suplex! The crowd erupts for this but before Nerval has a chance to pin, he notices the loose boot. He walks over to return the boot to Javier only for Javier to suddenly try to roll-up Nerval for the pin! Coach shrugs and counts it, getting half a second away from a three count before Nerval kicks out. Javier looks a bit frustrated, as if this was a planned gambit that didn't fully pay off. But it sure got close. I don't know whether to praise Martez's machinations or question Nerval's naivete but the crowd got its first near fall of this Basic Training class and it was a wonky one, at that.
However, Nerval still has control due to the lingering effects of that huge suplex and we finally get to see what he can do One of those things is put together fierce combinations stemming from the frustration of the early part of the match.
He appears to believe this match is over and starts setting up for a powerbomb. He hoists Javier high in the air, only for Javier to spit in Nerval's face! This causes Nerval to loose grasp of Javier, who lands on his feet, kicks Nerval in the stomach, and uses a tights-pulling piledriver to put Nerval down for the win.
Maybe when Javier gets to the main roster, he'll upgrade to a mist the audience can see better.
Nerval Pithory (X) [Tights Pulling Piledriver - 9:05] (O) Javier Martez
Coach Everett instructs them both to wait outside, and makes sure an angry Nerval is on the other side of the ring from a posturing and celebrating Javier. Ryuji Bansho and Magog are called for the next match.
Ryuji gets on the apron, then flips over the top rope, rolls once on the ground, and sits up with both hands held high. As he soaks in the crowd adulation, Magog climbs over the top rope and seemingly begins to try to detach it from the corner post. Coach quickly runs over to get him to stop, with Magog yelling out "supplies!" as we see Drake and Barton speaking under their breath a little nervously. Drake Yoshida leaves his seat and comes into the ring, seemingly wanting to observe/patrol this match more closely. So it looks like we're set to have this next encounter now without any hoarding.
Match 2: Ryuji Bansho vs. Magog
The speed vs. strength advantage that we saw last match was even more exaggerated here. Magog had no hope of even laying his hands on Ryuji for the first five minutes of the match. However, the flip side of this battle was that Ryuji couldn't knock Magog off of his feet, despite hitting him with every move in his arsenal that didn't require some kind of preparation. In fact, given just how big Ryuji's speed advantage was here, it may have been prudent for him to have slowed down just a bit and stopped peppering Magog with low-intensity moves. Even a few seconds more wind-up before his attacks would have been more impactful and likely not caught by Magog.
But Ryuji seemed content to run, and slide under, Magog in an attempt to quickly knock him off balance. This was to no avail. Magog's oafish attempts to reach for Ryuji also led to nothing concrete. On the plus side, a match like this gives Coach and Barton a lot of room for improvement to work with both men. It's clear each one of them possess great physical assets but they need to find a way to implement a workable strategy.
Eventually, Ryuji got fed off and realized he was losing the crowd due to this stalemate. He ran and jumped to the top turnbuckle then goaded Magog, who slowly ran to him with his outstretched arms. Ryuji smiled then hopped to the apron as Magog slammed into the post. Ryuji then attempted to trip Magog with a foot sweep. But rather than fall over, Magog tumbled backward a little. Ryuji once again jumped onto the top turnbuckle and launched himself off of it, flying about 1/3 of the way across the ring and landed on Magog's shoulders. From the looks of it, Ryuji was attempting a swinging hurracanrana but his momentum plus Magog's caused them both to tumble over the top rope! The fans gasp but neither man landed dangerously. Although they are both clearly worse for the wear, we fortunately avoided injuries on this first night. As Drake nervously starts the outside count, Magog is the first to get up around the five second mark. He slowly rolls into the ring. Ryuji is still down but the crowd's applause and chants for him energize his return to his feet. He runs and slides into the ring to beat the 20 count, and manages to continue to slide under Magog.
However, Magog had this "under the legs" move scouted from before. He grabs Ryuji around the neck and starts to lift him up into what I imagined would be a choke. But Ryuji jumps along with the lift to vault higher than Magog expected and beyond his grip. As Ryuji drops from an altitude approaching 10 feet in the air, he grabs Magog's head with his legs and sends him down with a gravity-assisted frankensteiner!
There's only about 10 seconds left but that is still enough time for Drake to count the pin.
Ryuji Bansho (O) ["Bansho-off" - 9:50] (X) Magog
Wow, I'll give it to Ryuji, he knows how to close a match in style. That was the most dramatic win of the night so far! The fans are loving that finish, especially given how he recovered after that earlier crash and burn. Ryuji thrusts his hands up in victory, clearly soaking in the crowd's adulation. For his part, once Magog (fortunately) got up, he was in good spirits. He was no worse for the wear and clapped his hand along with the applause. Yes, I said hand singular, as he literally just clapped his right hand together.
It was awkward. Let's...let's move on.
For our intermission tonight, vintage and newly released “Basic Training” t-shirts, posters, and tote bags are ready at the merchandise stand and sells out within minutes. "Chrome" t-shirts are also a hot item with Kazuo's return to the UBL.
Drake decides to stay in the ring so that Coach can talk with Barton about the last two matches and be able to better observe our final match. And that is between Glenn Dyon and Gerulf Sieger. This isn't the first time I've heard the name of Gerulf Sieger. He trained at the same Dojo that Tetsu did when he was first starting out, before Matsuki Holdings came a'calling. I'm already sensing a different attitude but I can only assume his fundamentals are solid. I don't know as much about Glenn but he seems to be one of the older rookie recruits that UBL has ever received. He also appears to be incredibly focused. Each man gets into the ring for our third match and final match for tonight.
Match 3: Glenn Dyon vs. Gerulf Sieger
There is a feeling out process but it is much more strategic than the haphazard clash of styles and physical attributes that we saw in the previous two matches. Sieger is scouting Glenn's decision to use his speed and lateral movement by testing him with middle kicks and feigned amateur takedowns. Glenn is measuring Sieger's distance and attempting to gauge his patterns by allowing him to deliver some kicks unchecked. It does appear those kicks are starting to take a toll but the crowd gasps when Glenn suddenly delivers a punch with a downward arc right onto Sieger's thigh, causing him to wince and hop backward. It seems Glenn figured his pattern out and showed his ability to counter. The crowd is getting into this.
Sieger tries a different tactic this time, feigning a quicker kick to the shins. Glenn doesn't fall for it. Sieger launches a real one this time, hitting Glenn, who shrugs it off. Sieger feigns yet another, but holds his kick in the air, then goes back to Glenn's midsection. Glenn attempts to punch it again but Sieger quickly strafes his leg right through Glenn's arm. This allows Sieger to balance his right leg on Glenn, before spinning and taking Glenn down face first with a sweeping scissor hold. Sieger rolls onto Glenn's back and attempts an elbow right between Glenn's shoulders, but Glenn already reached his arms back in anticipation and grabbed Sieger's arm, twisting it with a very unorthodox submission move. But Sieger is able to free himself by using his other arm to elbow Glenn in the back. Sieger rolls off of Glenn and they both get up.
We're about six minutes into the match. Sieger signals for Glenn to try something but Glenn does not seem interested in doing so. I think he prefers to counter his opponent's attacks. Sieger nods, understanding his role as offense in this chess match, and offers a test of strength. Glenn actually smiles at this, goading on Sieger even more. Sieger has the clear height advantage here but that is immediately neutralized by Glenn's superior strength. Sieger manages to break one of his arms free, twists Glenn's other arm, and then drops down with his knee planted under Glenn's face. This provides the first significant advantage that either of these competitors have had in this match and Sieger is poised to advance it.
Sieger immediately applies a camel clutch, and uses his legs to tuck Glenn's arms in, like a butterfly. When it seems apparent that Glenn won't give up, Sieger falls backward, turns both of them upside down, and attempts a pinfall. The sudden attempt caught Glenn by surprise but he kicks out in time. Sieger picks Glenn up and hits a roundhouse shotei, spinning Glenn around. Rather than fight the momentum, Glenn leans into it to land a blistering roundhouse kick!
Glenn covers for the pin but Sieger gets his shoulder up at the last millisecond!! Still, Glenn finally has control. But he notices Barton on the outside talking with the time keeper. I don't think we have much to go before this match is called. However, with Sieger down, Glenn isn't able to counter anything. He looks frustrated but picks Sieger up, hoping he'll mount another attack. He gives Sieger some time to collect himself but that isn't working. Sieger is still a little cloudy from that roundhouse kick so Glenn smacks him across the face. This doesn't seem intended as a show of disrespect but rather to wake Sieger up from his stupor. That being said, Javier seemed to enjoy it as he's laughing, further angering Nerval.
I'm not sure how aware Sieger is but his instincts take over and he forces a clinch in the middle of the ring. Glenn attempts a hip throw but Sieger hooks his leg and arm on to Glenn, blocking the move! Sieger elbows Glenn in the face, then pushes his body into a suplex position. Sieger lifts then drops Glenn with a shouten kai!!
The crowd gasps but right before Sieger can cover Glenn, Drake calls for the bell. The time limit has been reached!
Glenn Dyon (-) [Time Limit Draw - 10:00] (-) Gerulf Sieger
Wow, what a match!! Sure, you could say Gerulf would have claimed the victory if we had a few seconds more, but what if Glenn had truly pressed the advantage that he had after the kick rather than wait for Gerulf to attack? I don't know but this match raised even more questions for Barton and Coach Everett!
Barton gets back into the ring and raises the hands of both Gerulf and Glenn, once he recovers. Coach Everett calls the rest of the class into the ring, with Nerval still separated from Javier. Barton claps for all of the wrestlers and thanks the crowd. We fade out as everyone celebrates the new Basic Training class of UBL.
(Note: We are contractually obligated to mention that BT-3G is not a wireless network for Matsuki Mobile)