Tony D followed and started drilling Oshe by emulating his writing style and breaking the type of verses Oshea writes and showing everyone how allot of what oshea writes can be said to not makes sense. Oshea chose to go first and started off, just as Oshea always does, by quickly grasping the crowds attention with his witty jokes and hilarious punchlines. Although at the time Oshea had a tonne more battles under his belt, (more than most to be honest, with 14 wins and 11 loses) Tony had recently not only released a very well recieved ‘Dont Flop Webham’ video, but he was also on a small rampage of his own, beating everyone he had been put up against in a short space of time bringing his own battle tally up to an impressive 8 wins and 1 loss. This in turn brought both spitters to the forefront of the 4th Birthday event, were there title match was rightly advertised one of the headlining face offs of the weekend. When it was announced that Oshea was going to be defending his title against Tony D their were mixed emotions amongst the fans as some thought that Newcastle based spitter Deffinition should’ve got the chance to snatch the title from Oshea before Tony, instead Deffinition took on former secondary school teacher/poet turned battle rapper Mark Grist and the title shot went to Tony D.
Not only was this the first ever title match in Don’t Flop, but it was also the first rematch in Don’t Flop history. Oshea was the victor just under a year previous in the first ever title match for Don’t Flop when he faced off against Norwich based veteran Sensa on the Dont Flop ‘To The Test 10’ card.
The battle took place at Don’t Flop’s 4th Birthday event, a class of the best of the best that featured other classic slug fests such as New Jersey native Arsonal vs Manchester rapper Shotty Horroh and Sheffield’s own Psychosis Holochaust against Florida battle rapper Madness.
The match that saw the first ever Dont Flop Championion title defence, were Londoner Tony D stepped up to Liverpool battllerap veteran Oshea.