Match Type: Tornado Handicap Elimination "I Quit" Match
Rules: Competitors consist of one wrestler facing a team of two. Tag rules are not in play. There are no pinfalls, no submissions, and no disqualifications. A wrestler is eliminated when they say "I quit." The match ends when one side has no wrestlers remaining. No referee will be present in the ring.
15 Minutes Ago
Saoirse wasn't entirely sure this match wasn't intended as a form of retaliation. She hadn't had the smoothest relationship with LAW's booking team so far, and had made her complaints about the tepidness of her early matches inescapably clear. This, though...no referee, no restrictions, and a blatantly stacked match against two wrestlers at once. Furthermore, an "I Quit" match could require far more time and damage to end than a simple pin or submission. The possibility of her being injured was very high, and it was unlikely she'd be able to get out of this match intact. This could very easily be an attempt to teach her a lesson about asking for harder matches.
Saoirse couldn't stop an unpleasant grin from stretching across her face as she stared into the mirror of the isolated bathroom she had used to get ready. If that was the plan, they didn't know her at all.
Now
Theme Song
Introducing first...
The lights from the stadium dim to blackness. The opening chords of her theme begin. Showtime.
"...from Drogheda, Ireland, weighing in at 137 ibs..."
Striding out under a blinding storm of strobe lights, Wyvern takes to the center of the stage before holding up her thumbs to the sides of her neck and stomach. After a momentary pause, she whips both hands across to mime simultaneous slitting of the throat and belly. An improvised motion she had once done on a whim, the marketing team had apparently liked it and told her to keep doing it. Wyvern didn't care much about building a "brand," but the motion felt unique to her and encapsulated her intentions quite well. Playing to the crowd still wasn't really her thing, but this felt right.
WYVERN!
Wyvern makes her way down the ramp at a deliberate pace, forcing herself to stay slow so that she doesn't burn excess energy before the match has even started. This was going to take all of her reserves if she wanted to have any chance of winning. Coming up to the ring itself, she rolls her neck and shoulders to loosen up before climbing onto the apron and sliding between the top and middle ropes. As her music fades away, she moves into one of the far corners of the ring, taking a hunched-over seat on the bottom turnbuckle. She turns her head back up to look at the entrance, fixing an intense stare on it as she waits for the entry of her opponents.