*The crowd explodes into cheers for the former Precision Champion, Jack Rogue, who emerges from behind the LED board with an optimistic smile on his face. He walks to either side of the stage to hype up the crowd before running with his usual bounding strides to the ring. He slides under the bottom rope and springs back to his feet to shake hands with Trent Kingsley, before standing on the nearby middle rope to play to the crowd some more. As his music begins to face, Jack takes a seat at the signing table and picks up the microphone placed there for him*
Jack: Ladies and gentlemen of Cincinnati, Ohio!
*A loud, fun cheap pop rings out, causing Rogue’s grin to widen*
Jack: Well, earlier tonight you all finally heard the completed line-up for the Money In The Bank ladder match. It will be me, Antonio “Anarchy” Stark, “The Amazing Classic” Chris Young, and “The Man That Tapped Out To Jack Rogue In His Debut”, Kyle Rayner. Speaking of the second bounty hunter to enter Precision in the last few months, he had some unsavoury things to say about me earlier on tonight. Kyle, you went on about how you had the ascendancy for a lot of that match and that’s true, even if it’s to be expected when you had every opportunity to plan your attack from when my open challenge was announced while I had about as long to prepare as it took you to walk down the ramp. Yet despite that advantage, you tapped out to the Bridge to Victory and gave me some of the momentum that is going to propel me to the Money In The Bank briefcase next week. Inevitably, you had 1001 excuses as to why that was intentional, acceptable and irrelevant, but that’s not how I see it. You can claim now that you tapped out so you couldn’t get hurt, not because you couldn’t bear the pain but suffice to say that’s not how it sounded to me at the time. You can claim that you’ll be around forever because you can pick your battles but guess what – you’re in the wrong business. This is professional wrestling and that means that a) you’re here to be a professional, not run from fights like a bitch, and b) you’ll be here for only as long as you’re relevant, so unless you want to lose your delusions of a very wealthy future real quick you’d better rethink that whole thing about disregarding wins and losses. I used to lose a lot, but at least I was man enough not to make excuses.
Jack: Then, somehow, Antonio Stark made it into this match. He earned it by beating Lyle Bronson, the same guy I submitted earlier tonight. Now – no offence, Mr Kingsley – but I am bewildered as to how and why that was a qualifying match. Mr Stark is perhaps the only person in the entire history of this company to achieve less than The Anarchist, his dad, did. That man with a title shot briefcase is death to this company, and for that reason, you had better believe that I will not let it happen. I’ve committed my crimes against this company and now I’m committed to protecting it from others. As for Chris Young, I have plenty of respect for him. A true veteran of this business and this company, the winner of the last Money In The Bank match in Sony Storm - a briefcase he never got the chance to cash in. He is the man I’m most concerned about in this match; he’s the man I’ve got my eyes on, especially after he pinned me in this ring three weeks ago. But I refuse to lose again. I’ll show that losing the Precision Championship was a blip and not the start of a downward spiral; I’ll prove that I am a main event talent and the man to lead Precision because – despite adversity – I have been and will again be the best wrestler in the world.
*With that, Rogue puts the microphone on the table and signs the contract. Before Kingsley can announce who is due to enter next, the music of Antonio Stark causes vociferous boos to fill the arena*