APAC Wrestling WrestleLegion II Preview
Meta Description: APAC Wrestling WrestleLegion II storms into ESI Grand Hall on 14 February with a sold-out card featuring Dreamkiller Azroy vs Alfa Nazri for the APAC Championship, Nor “Phoenix” Diana vs Tarlee, Crystal vs Maya Hartsteel, and multiple heated rivalries set to explode
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SEAWrestling
2/12/20264 min read


APAC Wrestling WrestleLegion II Preview – Full Card, Rivalries & Championship Stakes (14 February, ESI Grand Hall)
Malaysia’s fastest-rising promotion kicks off its 2026 calendar in emphatic fashion as APAC Wrestling WrestleLegion II lands at the ESI Grand Hall on 14 February — and it’s already sold out.
For a company that has steadily built momentum over the past two years, this is less a statement of intent and more a confirmation of arrival. WrestleLegion II is not reliant on international headline imports or nostalgia acts. Instead, it’s a card constructed around the core stars APAC has cultivated, reinforced by familiar Southeast Asian names who understand the regional landscape.
The last two ESI Grand Hall events set a high bar for atmosphere and in-ring quality. Expectations are therefore not modest — they’re enormous.
Below is your full preview of APAC Wrestling WrestleLegion II, including key storylines, championship implications, and the questions that will define the night.
WrestleLegion Pinfall Battle Royale
APAC’s own twist on the traditional gauntlet concept opens the evening.
Details remain deliberately vague — participants have not been fully disclosed, and the exact structure is still under wraps. What is clear is that WrestleLegion’s Pinfall Battle Royale has become a platform for surprises. Whether that means returning names, emerging prospects, or regional crossovers remains to be seen.
Expect chaos, opportunism, and at least one breakout performance.
NYC & Serigala vs Marcus Pitt & Damien Slater
This tag match is rooted in unfinished business from Slamfest, where TMDK’s interference enabled Mikey Broderick to secure a controversial victory over Serigala.
Now, Serigala aligns with Singapore’s veteran ace NYC in pursuit of revenge. Across the ring stand Marcus Pitt and Damien Slater — the latter widely viewed as the instigator behind the earlier controversy.
The dynamic here is clear: experience and pride versus arrogance and calculated disruption. If Serigala and NYC can isolate Slater, retribution may be swift. But Pitt’s presence adds unpredictability.
This is less about rankings and more about restoring order.
Eurasian Dragon vs Hendo Ramli – Anything Goes
More than a year of betrayal culminates here.
Eurasian Dragon and Hendo Ramli have oscillated between uneasy alliance and outright hostility. Attempts at reconciliation failed. Attempts at controlled competition failed. Now, under Anything Goes stipulations, structure is removed entirely.
No disqualifications. No restraints. No safety net.
Given their history, this contest is unlikely to resemble a conventional wrestling match. It will be physical, personal, and potentially career-altering.
Mighty Eddie Emil vs Raga Ngadai (w/ Tobias Frost)
At his shocking debut, Raga Ngadai, accompanied by Tobias Frost, left Mighty Eddie Emil incapacitated — assaulting him with a cane and sidelining him.
Eddie is now medically cleared and demanding accountability.
But the dynamic has shifted. Since that debut attack, Raga Ngadai has toured Southeast Asia, gaining experience and momentum. He returns not as a disruptor but as a threat consolidating his dominance.
This contest has moved beyond win-loss records.
It is personal.
Will Eddie’s return narrative culminate in redemption — or will Ngadai establish that his debut was merely the beginning?
Crystal vs Maya Hartsteel
Two eras converge on APAC’s biggest stage.
Maya Hartsteel continues her upward trajectory, having made an immediate impact since entering APAC Wrestling. She is fearless, direct, and intent on accelerating her rise.
Across the ring stands Crystal — the Queen of Philippine Wrestling — celebrating a decade in the industry. A veteran of countless battles, she is not inclined to be a stepping stone for anyone, particularly on an anniversary year that carries symbolic weight.
They know each other. They have shared locker rooms and rings before. Familiarity eliminates excuses.
This is youth versus experience. Ambition versus legacy.
There will be no sentimentality at WrestleLegion II — only clarity.
“The Retis” Double K vs “Master of All” Shaukat
Few rivalries in APAC Wrestling have simmered as long — or as psychologically — as this.
For over a year, Double K and Shaukat have engaged in calculated humiliation, manipulation, and personal attacks. The moment Double K shaved Shaukat’s hair represented a point of no return.
Double K framed it as exposure.
Shaukat internalised it as transformation.
Now, on APAC’s largest platform of the year, their confrontation becomes definitive.
The lingering question: is Shaukat physically at 100%? Recent injuries disrupted plans and introduced uncertainty. If compromised, Double K will exploit it without hesitation.
This is not simply revenge. It is reckoning.
Nor “Phoenix” Diana vs Tarlee
Tarlee earned her No. 1 Contender position at SlamFest 25 and set her sights on the APAC Women’s Championship.
But the landscape shifted when Nor “Phoenix” Diana lost the title to Mercedes Moné.
The championship is no longer part of this equation. Pride is.
Tarlee’s pursuit has evolved from opportunity to obsession. She wants Diana — not circumstance, not shortcuts.
For Diana, this match represents recalibration. Without the belt, her trajectory becomes uncertain. A loss deepens that uncertainty. A victory reasserts relevance.
With Mercedes Moné now holding the championship, the winner here becomes the arguable next contender — if momentum can be seized decisively.
APAC Wrestling Championship
Dreamkiller Azroy (c) vs “Alpha” Alfa Nazri
This is the centrepiece.
Dreamkiller Azroy’s evolution has been methodical. Once the Dream Chaser, he re-emerged transformed — colder, more ruthless, and undefeated. As APAC Champion, he has demonstrated a willingness to bend rules and cross ethical lines to preserve his reign.
Opposite him stands Alfa Nazri — the prodigy. Touted as the future of Malaysian professional wrestling, Alfa’s ascent has not been manufactured. It has been incremental, earned, and visible. He has absorbed losses, refined his craft, and grown into this opportunity.
This is not merely champion versus challenger.
It is present dominance versus anticipated succession.
Cunning versus discipline.
Control versus inevitability.
If Azroy retains, his era extends further into undisputed territory.
If Alfa wins, APAC Wrestling enters a new chapter immediately.
There is no middle ground.
Final Thoughts
WrestleLegion II is structured around continuity rather than spectacle for spectacle’s sake. Rivalries have been layered over time. Championships are embedded in long-form storytelling. Emerging talent is positioned against established names without artificial inflation.
For a sold-out ESI Grand Hall audience, this is both culmination and commencement — the endpoint of 2025 narratives and the ignition point for 2026 trajectories.
If the last two ESI events are any indicator, missing this show is not merely missing an event — it is missing a moment in the growth of Malaysian professional wrestling.
On 14 February, APAC Wrestling does not restart its calendar.
It accelerates it.
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