Ring Of Rebirth Red Light Green Light Recap

7/29/2025

Show Report: Ring of Rebirth – Red Light, Green Light

Date: Sunday, July 28, 2025

Ring of Rebirth returned on Sunday night with Red Light, Green Light, a compact but explosive event that made room for sharp in-ring storytelling and pushed newer faces into key positions. The night began with a ten-bell salute in memory of Hulk Hogan, a gesture that earned respectful silence from the crowd.

Condoms and Chaos

In classic Ring of Rebirth fashion, the event mixed irreverence with intensity. A lucky draw gave away a pack of condoms—practical and eyebrow-raising in equal measure—before the official card rundown by ED (Eurasian Dragon) was suddenly interrupted by The Legion of Total Anarchy (TLTA). Appearing at three-quarters strength, Riky Malek and CK Vin were joined by Kentona, who hijacked the microphone and hurled personal accusations at Eurasian Dragon, dredging up past history and inappropriate insinuations.

The Dragon struck back physically, but the numbers quickly overwhelmed him. Just as TLTA departed, the Geylang Syndicate arrived for the scheduled match between Eurasian Dragon and Geylang Green.

Eurasian Dragon vs Geylang Green

Despite the ambush, Dragon insisted he was ready to fight. Geylang Green, flanked by Raj and Alfred, took early control with punishing power moves, including a big boot that nearly secured the win. The Syndicate shouted support throughout, but Dragon showed resilience, repeatedly squaring up and refusing to stay down.

A ref bump off an errant airplane spin gave Dragon a moment to recover, and a well-placed Russian legsweep earned him the three-count. The Syndicate wasn’t done, though—Raj immediately called for his own match, and Dragon accepted on the spot.

Raj vs Noor

Noor brought surprising aggression in this impromptu clash, landing several heavy power moves that briefly put Raj on the back foot. But Raj’s ruthlessness soon came through—stomps, chokes, and kicks gradually wore Noor down. While Noor showed heart in fighting back, Raj sealed the deal with a vicious knee to the back of the head.

John Day vs Raj

After intermission, the first formally introduced match of the night saw UK-based traveler John Day cut a scathing promo on Singaporean wrestling. His smug dismissal of the local scene didn’t sit well with the crowd—or with Raj, who returned to shut him up.

Raj came out swinging, but Day matched him with calculated strikes and a cocky, deliberate pace. A stiff dropkick and figure-four leglock pushed Raj to the edge, but another ref bump allowed Raj to hit a now-familiar trigger knee to secure the win. This was one of the night’s most competitive bouts, elevating both men in the eyes of the fans.

Main Event: Eurasian Dragon & NYC vs Riky Malek & CK Vin (w/ Kentona)

The main event brought the energy of a full-on grudge match. NYC and CK Vin started with speed and precision, before Dragon tagged in to steady the pace. The veterans had the early edge, but Malek and Vin used frequent tags and high-impact moves—including a dramatic airborne press from Malek—to take control.

The tide turned when Dragon hit a desperate body slam, allowing NYC to storm in with a flurry of deadly strikes. Just as NYC built momentum, a confusing finish followed: CK Vin scored a pinfall with NYC’s foot clearly on the ropes. Kentona’s protest led to his ejection from ringside.

In the chaos, NYC capitalized with a run-in knee strike for the win. But the celebration was cut short when Kentona returned and speared both NYC and Dragon. TLTA chased the referee away and continued the beatdown until the Geylang Syndicate stormed in to break things up.

Closing Thoughts

With several regular roster members absent—including Bhai, Erfie, JT, and Khanna—Red Light, Green Light kept things simple but strong. It gave key midcarders room to stretch out in longer matches and continued developing the promotion’s main rivalries. Eurasian Dragon’s presence remains central, Raj looks more dangerous than ever, and the Legion of Total Anarchy's looming threat continues to stir tension across the locker room.