Sunday, 2 October 2016

FULL TIME:Tottenham Hotspur 2-0 Manchester City, WATCH HIGHLIGHTS

What a performance from Spurs, and what a performance from every single player. They pressed with violence, attacked with verve, and defended with both. City may have been without De Bruyne, but Spurs were missing Dembele and Kane.

Talking of City, Guardiola got his team wrong and that defence just isn’t up to it. If other teams can get enough of the ball - a big if, granted - this won’t be its only chastening afternoon.
          

FULL TIME:Manchester United 1 - 1 Stoke City, WATCH HIGHLIGHTS

Joe Allen was given man of the match by Glen Hoddle, but it’s hard to look past Lee Grant in Stoke City’s goal. He made two world-class stops to deny Ibrahimovic, then Lingard, as well as a handful of others to keep his side in the game.

They proved to be crucial, as the game’s other keeper, David de Gea, gifted Stoke their equaliser. This is a massive result for Stoke, if not in points then in morale, and they will head into the international break with a smile on their faces: Sunderland, Hull City and Swansea await on the other side. Stoke might still be in the relegation zone, but on this showing, they will be absolutely fine.

United squandered a few chances, but Paul Pogba was especially guilty today, missing the target on three separate occasions when it was surely easier for the £93m man to score.
          

West Ham 1-1 Middlesbrough: Payet stunner rescues point for Hammers, WATCH HIGHLIGHT

Dimitri Payet's stunning solo goal salvaged a point for struggling West Ham as they ended a run of four consecutive Premier League defeats in a 1-1 draw against Middlesbrough at London Stadium.

Cristhian Stuani's second-half header put the away side ahead and had the home fans fearing a fifth defeat on the spin in Saturday's contest.

However, Payet stole the show for the Hammers, the France international leaving the Boro defence in a daze with a superb run and clever finish to level the match in the 57th minute.

West Ham went closest to breaking the deadlock in a first half that saw few clear-cut chances when Mark Noble rattled the woodwork with a thunderous strike.

The match sparked into life after the interval with goalline technology confirming Stuani's opener before Payet's moment of magic restored parity.

But neither side could find a much-needed winner and Middlesbrough remain two points and two places above 18th-placed West Ham, with Aitor Karanka's men themselves now winless in their past five league games.

Bilic rang the changes in a bid to halt West Ham's run of defeats including playing without a recognised striker as Michail Antonio replaced Simone Zaza up front.

The Hammers have been beset by injuries this term and their situation worsened in the fifth minute when Sam Byram was taken from the field on a stretcher with a hamstring injury.

Shortly after, Middlesbrough forged the first opportunity when Viktor Fischer flashed a low effort across the face of goal..
West Ham grew into the match and Payet became more influential, with the playmaker seeing a close-range shot blocked before hitting a blistering strike wide.

The home side continued to press and George Friend did well to prevent Antonio's header reaching the target, while Noble saw a low shot from the edge of the area inch past the upright.

Noble then went agonisingly close on the stroke of half-time as his dipping effort clattered the underside of the crossbar.

Bilic introduced Zaza as West Ham looked to build some momentum after the restart, but it was Middlesbrough who gained the upper hand as Adrian parried Jordan Rhodes' strike wide.

And the visitors had the lead from the resulting corner, Stuani rising highest to power a header goalwards that Noble could not prevent going over the line.

Middlesbrough's lead was short-lived, though, as Payet turned on the style with a mesmerising run from the left touchline, taking on five defenders before sliding a sublime reverse finish into the bottom-left corner.

Payet was at his best again on the hour-mark, bursting onto Zaza's flick and drawing a foul from Marten de Roon, but the ex-Marseille man could not make the resulting free-kick count.

West Ham continued to mount the pressure and Victor Valdes had to be alert to stop Cheikhou Kouyate smuggling home from a corner.

And the hosts should have had a late winner when Antonio engineered space for himself in the area, but the winger could only blaze his strike over as West Ham's winless streak in the league was extended to five matches.
           

FULL TIME:Watford 2 - 2 AFC Bournemouth, WATCH HIGHLIGHT

Eddie Howe was adamant speculation linking him with England had not been a distraction in a week that ended with his Bournemouth side drawing 2-2 at Watford. The Hornets twice came from behind at Vicarage Road and the England hopeful Jack Wilshere spurned a glorious opportunity to win it for Bournemouth.

Howe played down suggestions he would be Sam Allardyce’s successor as England manager on Thursday and repeated his focus was on Bournemouth after the Premier League clash.

“It’s been the easiest thing in the world for me,” Howe said. “Football and the day-to-day workings of the job are what I love to do. So, no disrespect, I don’t take a blind bit of notice of anything that is written or said because I have to focus on the football and the players I have here.”

Wilshere missed out on Allardyce’s one and only England squad and did little to enhance his prospects of a return for the World Cup qualifiers with Malta and Slovakia.

The on-loan Arsenal midfielder twice hit the outside of the post, the second from six yards out with the goal gaping after Adam Smith’s cross from the right. Moments later he was substituted. Wilshere has not completed 90 minutes in a Premier League game for 20 games and more than two years. But Howe preferred to accentuate the positives as Wilshere’s hunt for a first Premier League goal since May 2015 continued.

“The pleasing thing for us is that Jack’s getting in goal-scoring positions,” Howe added. “With his class and his quality there’s no doubt he’ll be scoring goals for this team in the future. The last two games he’s improved as the game has gone on. He’s grown into the game. I felt that was the same today. His influence grew. And I think he’s going to be a massive player for us.”

Callum Wilson’s first-half header from Junior Stanislas’s cross was cancelled out by Troy Deeney. Josh King restored the lead moments after coming off the substitutes’ bench, but the Hornets levelled for a second time through Isaac Success three minutes later.

If this was an audition for England then Wilson and Deeney stood out, although the Holland-born Morocco winger Nordin Amrabat outshone them both. It was not one of Howe’s team’s better performances.

The Bournemouth manager believes Wilson was close to an England call-up at the start of last season before a serious knee injury. Asked whether Wilson should be in Gareth Southgate’s squad, which is named on Sunday evening, Howe said: “I think he has the ability to get there.

“From my perspective at the moment it’s still making sure he’s OK fitness-wise and injury-wise and continues his good form, because he’s building some momentum now.”

The Watford head coach, Walter Mazzarri, was pleased with the character shown by his side on his 55th birthday, particularly in the second half.

He said: “I was happy with my team. They had the character of never giving up and this for me is important. [At half-time] I told them that we played very well in the first half, but they have to avoid doing silly mistakes we sometimes do, giving the ball very easily to our rivals.

“I also told them that given the opposition we have to press higher. My players listened to me. They came out in the second half doing what I told them.”
            

FULL TIME:Sunderland 1 - 1 West Bromwich Albion, WATCH HIGHLIGHT

Sunderland fans joke about Patrick van Aanholt being “dangerous at both ends” but, for once, he left David Moyes smiling. A most attacking left-back, the Dutchman has been culpable for the concession of quite a few goals during his distinctly chequered time on Wearside but, equally, scores his fair share.

Dropped to the bench by Moyes – (still fuming about Van Aanholt’s summertime smoking of shisha pipes) – he enjoyed one of his better afternoons after replacing the injured Jan Kirchhoff and, capitalising on a piece of wonderful skill from Duncan Watmore, scored the equaliser. The resultant draw dictates that Sunderland’s wait for a first Premier League win of the season continues but, although still bottom, they have at least doubled their points tally to two.

For long stretches of an afternoon on which Tony Pulis’s side missed several extremely presentable chances following Nacer Chadli’s assured opener, the injury hit Wearsiders looked doomed to yet another defeat but, creditably, they never folded.

“West Brom are the masters of not conceding goals but we kept going,” said an unusually upbeat Moyes. “It’s a disappointment because we need wins but we’ll take something from this. I’m glad we were able to give the supporters something.”

His side very nearly enjoyed the best of beginnings. An unusually fluent home passing move concluded with Watmore’s ball finding Jermain Defoe. Having cleverly sprung the visiting offside trap, and with only Ben Foster to beat, the former England striker took a steadying touch before, uncharacteristically, dragging his shot wide from about 12 yards out.

Fortified by John O’Shea’s reassuring recall to central defence, Sunderland enjoyed plenty of possession, something partly facilitated by Didier Ndong’s high-energy midfield enterprise. Yet ever the realist, Moyes will doubtless have noted that this apparent dominance rarely resulted in Ben Foster being tested while West Brom menaced sporadically on the counterattack and at set pieces.

When, at the end of one break, O’Shea and company were confounded by Matt Phillips’s pull back to Chadli, they had Jordan Pickford to thank for bailing them out, the England Under-21s goalkeeper doing well to repel the former Tottenham Hotspur player’s shot.

Unfortunately for the locals Chadli was enjoying himself in the weak October sunshine and soon defied Pickford. His goal began with Kirchhoff conceding possession to Claudio Jacob and moving the ball on to Phillips. After a brief advance, his well-weighted pass fell perfectly for the scorer, whose first touch took him away from Lamine Koné. All that remained was for an attacking midfielder whose polish, pace and physical presence were already enhancing the afternoon to slide a classy, acutely angled left foot shot into the far corner. It was his third goal in four Premier League games. “Chadli,” said Pulis. “Has been fantastic for us.”

If Moyes must have been disappointed with Koné, he can only have been relieved to see James McClean – heavily booed by his less-than-adoring former public – miscue a cross that had promised to offer the unmarked Salomón Rondón a simple tap-in on the verge of half-time.

Early in the new half Kirchhoff suffered the latest in a long line of injuries when he collapsed while jumping for a high ball and had to be carried off. Seeking to exacerbate Wearside misery, Darren Fletcher chested a ball down adroitly before unleashing a fine volley, ably diverted by Pickford. Home hearts were in mouths when Chadli pounced on the rebound but this time he shot wide.

At the other end, Pulis’s players generally defended admirably in the face of mounting pressure. Such sheer bloody-minded resolve was epitomised by the moment Jonny Evans brilliantly blocked Defoe’s goal-bound shot after Van Aanholt, on for Kirchhoff, and Wahbi Khazri bisected the visiting rearguard.

Fortunately for Moyes, Watmore possessed sufficient drive to unhinge that backline courtesy of a startling change of pace and deftly dinked ball which prefaced Van Aanholt sending a half-volley looping into the net. It was his second goal this season.

“We’re really disappointed; we had 21 crosses and 18 shots, we just needed a bit more quality in the final third,” said Pulis. “But the great thing for Sunderland was that the crowd stuck with them; they kept them going.”
          

Full time: Swansea 1-2 Liverpool, WATCH HIGHLIGHT

There was plenty to smile about for Jürgen Klopp in the end as his team climbed to second in the table on the back of a fourth successive Premier League victory, yet the Liverpool manager made no attempt to sugarcoat a first-half performance that prompted the temperature to rise in the visitors’ dressing room at the interval.

Whatever Klopp said at half-time – the German admitted he was “very angry” – it did the trick as Liverpool, who were unrecognisable from the team that toiled in the opening 45 minutes, turned this game on its head to condemn Swansea to a defeat that leaves Francesco Guidolin clinging to his job.


James Milner delivered the crucial blow six minutes from time with his fourth penalty of the season, after Roberto Firmino had equalised early in the second half, and from that point on it was tempting to wonder what was going through the minds of Steve Kaplan and Jason Levien, Swansea’s American owners, as well as Guidolin’s.

Kaplan and Levien had flown in to watch this match in a visit that had been planned for a while but which took on far greater significance amid the speculation about Guidolin’s future. Ryan Giggs and Bob Bradley are both on a shortlist as part of a managerial search that has not always been conducted behind closed doors.

In fairness to Guidolin, Swansea were excellent in the opening 45 minutes and the Italian, judging from the number of times that his name was chanted, still has the support of a sizeable number of the club’s supporters. Yet the harsh reality is that this was a fifth defeat in seven league games, with Swansea collecting only one point from a possible 18 since winning at Burnley on the opening day. Those are the sort of statistics to worry any Premier League owner, irrespective of the fact that Swansea have played extremely well in patches in their last two fixtures, against Manchester City and now Liverpool.

While the visitors were much the better team after the interval, Swansea should have had more to show for their first-half efforts than Leroy Fer’s fourth goal of the season. Borja, the club’s £15.5m record signing, squandered two excellent chances, the second of which came after Fer had put Swansea ahead. Mike van der Hoorn could still have salvaged a point in injury-time but the central defender – the wrong man in the right place – sliced wide with the goal at his mercy.

It was some turnaround from Liverpool in the second half and strange to reconcile the team that dominated that period with the one that looked so out of sorts early on. Liverpool were so pedestrian in their build-up in the first 45 minutes and seemed to be taken by surprise when Swansea played them at their own game by pressing aggressively all over the pitch.

To compound things for Liverpool they lost Adam Lallana to a groin injury early on and Daniel Sturridge was booked for diving. Klopp talked afterwards about how he sensed that his players had lost their discipline and composure, right down to “moaning about decisions that were absolutely right”.

Borja could, and should, have put Swansea ahead after five minutes but the Spaniard, who was totally unmarked as he got in between Joël Matip and Nathaniel Clyne, inexplicably headed over the bar from the edge of the six-yard box. It was a poor miss and there was another to come from the same player in the 26th minute, when he nodded Gylfi Sigurdsson’s free-kick wide of the post.

By that stage Swansea were ahead after Fer exposed a familiar weakness in Liverpool under Klopp. Sigurdsson’s deep corner kick was headed back across goal by Borja and Fer, via a slight touch from Van der Hoorn, stabbed over the line. It was the 16th set-piece goal Liverpool have conceded since Klopp took over as manager last October – only Swansea have shipped more in that period.

The second-half, however, was a different story. Liverpool took control of the game and it was no surprise when Firmino levelled. Jordan Henderson lofted the ball back into the area after Philippe Coutinho’s free-kick came back of the wall and Firmino, with the freedom of the penalty area as the Swansea defence pushed out, guided his header into the corner.

It was now one-way traffic, with Swansea pinned back. Coutinho stroked a lovely effort from the edge of the area inches wide and Sadio Mané saw his shot deflected over the bar by Kyle Naughton’s superb challenge as Liverpool continued to press. Swansea looked like they might cling on but with the clock ticking down Àngel Rangel clumsily bundled into Firmino and Milner made no mistake from the spot. Then came Van der Hoorn’s awful late miss.

With that the game was up for Swansea and it remains to be seen if the same is true for Guidolin.
       

Hull City 0-2 Chelsea, WATCH HIGHLIGHT

Not for the first time, Chelsea were a much better team in the second half than in the first and thanks a couple great goals — identical lovely finishes into the top corner from Willian and then Costa — the Blues head into the international break with three points. WATCH HIGHLIGHT BELOW

         

Thursday, 29 September 2016

Kim K looks naked in see-through dress to Balmain show at Paris Fashion Week

You would think she's naked underneath the sheer dress but she's wearing a nude bra. She attended the Balmain show with her mum, Kris and older sister, Kourtney. See more photos after the cut...

See new baby looking like 80yrs old man due to rare condition

Doctors are worried, and rightly so, as more of such births are being recorded. A baby boy who looks like an 80yrs old man actually has a rare condition which causes him to age quickly. Born in Magura, Bangladesh, he has wrinkles, hollow eyes, a shrunken body and a thick layer of hair on his back.

Local doctors were left stunned as to what the cause of his ageing is.
But they believe he has progeria. The condition which affects just one in four million often restricts children from having a normal life and causes their body to age faster than it should.

A doctor, who had been treating him, said: "The baby does not look like a new born at all. There are prominent sings of ageing such a excessive wrinkles and rough skin texture."

But his parents are over the moon with the birth of their 'miracle' child and can't hold back their happiness. Father Biswajit Patro said: 'We can only thank God. There is no need to be unhappy about the appearance of my son.

"We will accept him the way he is. We are so happy to have a baby boy in the house. We are already blessed to have to have a daughter. Now we are a family of four. What else can we ask for."

Okorocha Gives Cars to The Paralympians for Winning Gold

Governor Rochas Okrocha has fulfilled the promise he made to Nigeria's victorious Paralympic gold medalists by presenting car gifts to them after a good outing at RIO 2016.

Three contingents from Imo state were among those that represented Nigeria and they all won gold medals in power lifting. Congrats to them! More photos below:

Fight Broke Out As Wife Storms Venue of Husband's Wedding to New Girlfriend

There was confusion at the Harare Magistrates’ Courts yesterday after a wife stormed the wedding between her husband and his new lover. The wife identified as Magdalene Chamunorwa showed up at the court in the company of her relatives and thoroughly beat up the said girlfriend.

She revealed to the marriage officer, Mr Tendai Mahwe, that the groom, Gift Singano, was her husband and that they have four children together.
She stormed into the wedding room moments before Singano exchanged vows with his new babe Francisca Kanyama. The drama was taken outside the court building where Magdalene exchanged blows with Francisca, who was still clad in her wedding gown.

The fight happened in full view of Singano who watched helplessly as his wife and lover got down to “business”. Onlookers, who were attending to their court businesses, cheered the fight and accused Kanyama of being a husband snatcher.

“He is my husband and we got married in 1992. I only discovered he wanted to marry his girlfriend when I saw a profile picture of her on his phone. We stay together in our matrimonial house in Crowborough here in Harare but he leaves me in the house and goes to co-habit with his girlfriend in Mufakose,” said the wife.

The man Singano confirmed that he has four children with Magdalene, but submitted that he divorced her five years ago. “We divorced in 2011 because she was too violent and I decided to end the marriage and left the house,” he said.

Photo of APC's Godwin Obaseki Celebrating His Victory

Governor-elect of Edo State, Godwin Obaseki, was pictured on Thursday evening celebrating on the streets after INEC declared him winner of the state Governorship election. More pics...

Tuesday, 27 September 2016

Burnley 2-0 Watford {WATCH HIGHLIGHT]

Jeff Hendrick and Michael Keane scored their first Premier League goals as Burnley brushed aside a ragged Watford 2-0 at Turf Moor.

Hendrick, the club’s £10.5million record signing in the summer, nodded home Steven Defour’s 38th-minute corner and the Belgian bagged a second assist when Keane rose to head a second shortly after half-time.


Defour has now scored one and set up three of Burnley’s five goals this season, and here provided the kind of spark that was visibly lacking from the visitors, who suffered a sharp comedown having turned over Manchester United last time out.

For the Clarets it was a welcome second win of the campaign, following their surprise defeat of Liverpool, while the visitors may wish to write off their trip to Lancashire as a bad road trip.

They were passengers in the first period, allowing Burnley’s industrious midfield to over-run them.

Walter Mazzarri tinkered with his 3-5-2 formation early on, reverting to a back four with Valon Behrami picking up the extra defensive duties.

The Clarets had all the territory and all the meaningful possession but, until Hendrick intervened, few clear chances.

Hendrick and Johann Berg Gudmundsson were the likeliest threats, the Irishman always lurking in the space behind Sam Vokes while the Icelander served notice with a couple of tempting crosses.

Vokes won a corner from one Gudmundsson delivery and when that was half-cleared George Boyd stung Heurelho Gomes’ palms with a snap shot.

Gudmundsson also lashed a 25-yard drive wide of the near post but Watford, despite regular panicky clearances and under-hit passes, were hanging in.

The away end looked to lift things by launching a “Troy Deeney for England” chant but their captain was feeding on scraps.

He had only one real opportunity and was denied at the near post by Three Lions squad man Tom Heaton.

A corner at least allowed Watford to show off a routine that ended in a sweetly-struck Jose Holebas volley but Claret shirts blocked the shot and its follow up to sustain the stalemate.

Half-time was beckoning when Dean Marney intercepted a stray Gudmundsson shot and nicked a corner, allowing Defour to take aim from the right.

The Belgian aimed for Hendrick, who outmuscled Holebas to force his header over the line.

Watford seemed to think Defour’s cross had drifted out on its way into the box but there was no reprieve.

The only recriminations about Burnley’s second, five minutes after the restart, were aimed at defenders rather than officials.

After another Defour corner had come back to him the midfielder crossed again, with Watford this time allowing Keane to climb above them and direct the ball home.

Burnley’s desire was laudable but they were up against the most benign defence imaginable.

Defour attempted to add a goal to his pair of assists on the hour, working Gomes from 20 yards – an effort the Brazilian could only beat away in self-defence.

Watford did little more than hint at a comeback, Isaac Success sliding a shot across goal after burrowing in on the left and Behrami volleying wide.
             

Monday, 26 September 2016

Seth Rollins vs. Kevin Owens - WWE Universal Title Match: WWE Clash of Champions 2016 {VIDEO}

WWE Universal Champion Kevin Owens def. Seth Rollins
INDIANAPOLIS — The Kevin Owens Show rolls on. The longest-reigning WWE Universal Champion of all time will extend his record now that Owens has defeated Seth Rollins in his first title defense at WWE Clash of Champions. That being said, Owens should probably send a fruit basket or something to his “best friend,” Chris Jericho, who teed The Prizefighter up for the maneuver that ultimately put Rollins away.



All of which is to say The Architect should be doubly bitter over this loss, since he had promised to prove he was still “The Man” in WWE to Raw General Manager Mick Foley and Commissioner Stephanie McMahon (who he still held responsible for Triple H’s betrayal), and Rollins made good on that promise for the entirety of the match. Owens put up a smothering front, but Rollins hung tough, battling back from an attack that focused on his repaired knee and hitting Owens with a Frog Splash after K.O. accidentally put himself through the Spanish announce table.

That was when Jericho, in a “Kevin Owens Show” shirt and his signature scarf, sprinted to ringside and swung the match, setting off a scuffle that ended in the referee getting, well, KO’ed. Not only did Rollins hit a Pedigree that went unrecorded by an official (the audience managed a 15-count, though), he was forced to fight off both Jericho and Owens before Stephanie sent out a replacement ref. By then, however, Owens was ready to go, and quickly put Rollins down with a Pop-up Powerbomb that Stephanie observed with an inscrutable expression from the entrance ramp. Redesigned. Rebuilt. Denied.
           

Roman Reigns vs. Rusev - U.S. Title Match: WWE Clash of Champions 2016 {VIDEOS}

Roman Reigns def. United States Champion Rusev
INDIANAPOLIS — Sorry, Rusev. The honeymoon’s over. After celebrating his marriage to Lana for the better part of the last month, The Super Athlete suffered a bitter divorce from his United States Title courtesy of Roman Reigns, who left WWE Clash of Champions with Team Red’s star-spangled prize draped over his shoulder.

As a beaming Lana looked on from ringside, Rusev used his size advantage to manhandle the challenger for much of the match — a rare predicament for The Big Dog. It was when The Super Athlete miscalculated an aerial attack that Reigns found his opening and went on the offensive, hurling his momentarily-dazed foe into the barricade and the steel steps. As exhaustion began to set in for both competitors, Reigns executed a perfectly-timed Superman Punch that bought him enough leeway to set up the Spear.


The Super Athlete was saved, however, by a brief distraction from Lana, who left Reigns susceptible to a savage kick from Rusev that kept Reigns down for a two-count. Punishing Reigns with three more kicks to the spine, Rusev went for the Accolade, but Reigns was quick to his feet and even quicker to hit the Spear. In an attempt to force a disqualification win for her champion, The Ravishing Russian pulled the referee out of the ring before the three-count, prompting the official to eject her from ringside.

Rusev was ultimately able to lock Reigns in the punishing Accolade — a move The Big Dog’s all too familiar with — but with no more distractions and no potential for interference, Reigns was able to escape the hold and hit The Bulgarian Brute with a second Spear, this one keeping Rusev down for the count.

Rusev will undoubtedly look to regain his prize but, for now, Reigns is Raw’s proud bearer of Old Glory. Believe that.
         

Charlotte vs. Sasha Banks vs. Bayley: Raw Women's Title Match: WWE Clash of Champions

Raw Women's Champion Charlotte def. Sasha Banks and Bayley
INDIANAPOLIS — One thing you can say about everyone in the Raw Women’s Championship Triple Threat Match is that everyone deserved to be there. Charlotte, the reigning champion; Sasha Banks, the beloved challenger looking to recover from the ultimate humiliation; and, of course, Bayley, the insurgent upstart who hugged her way into the WWE Universe’s heart the second she showed up. All proved themselves worthy to hold championship gold, but only one of these women actually could, and that woman is Charlotte.



That’s right, the heiress to the wheelin’-dealin’ legacy of “The Nature Boy” found a way to win Flair and square, walking both in and out of the first Raw-exclusive pay-per-view as Team Red’s Women’s Champion. (The win was her 12th consecutive pay-per-view title match victory.) Bayley, surprisingly, was all but written off by both Sasha and Charlotte, who threw hands with each other throughout the entirety of the contest. Bayley wisely used that disrespect to her advantage, throwing a wrench into each of her opponents’ momentum when they least expected it. It took interference from Charlotte’s enforcer Dana Brooke — legal, thanks to the No Disqualification rules of the Triple Threat — to take Bayley out of the running and keep the battle confined to Charlotte and Sasha.

The downside to that was Bayley had more energy by the time she did rally, at which point Charlotte and Sasha had brutalized each other to the point of exhaustion. Bayley was quick to earn her competitors’ respect, but her more-seasoned foes had the veteran know-how to neutralize her comeback. Sasha, however, had taken severe punishment to her back, and was ultimately the first Superstar to be taken out of the equation when Charlotte hauled her off Bayley and threw her back-first into the barricade. Bayley unleashed a last-ditch effort in the pursuit of the miracle wins that have come to define her, but Charlotte would not be denied. The reigning Raw Women’s Champion escaped a small package and nailed Bayley with a big boot that also sent her stumbling into an interfering Sasha, then unleashed another boot that put Bayley down for three.
       
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