You can check out my reviews of the entire history of NXT here. But for those of you interested in what I thought of strictly the title changes. Here you go.
NXT was established as a game show competition in WWE ECW‘s time slot in the schedule. After a few years of some of the worst programming in the history of WWE TV, Triple H rebooted the show under the creative direction of Dusty Rhodes as a way to get eyes on this development system they had going. They had always had local TV for their outsourced development systems, but now they were trying it all in house.
August 29, 2012 – Winter Park, Florida
Seth Rollins def. Jinder Mahal {NXT Championship Match}
From NXT 132. The whole roster is on the ramp to watch the whole match, which is weird as hell if you ask me. Less weird, this was the best NXT match since the reboot. I was worried when I saw that they were going to give this thing almost twenty minutes, but Mahal brought what I assume is the best that he has (having watched his WWE Championship matches this is now confirmed) and Rollins got the crowd hyped up with his exciting offense. Rollins won in 14:24 (shown of 21:24) with the Blackout. I probably overrated this one a little bit, but I’d been watching a lot of very mediocre wrestling at the time. ***¾
January 9, 2013 – Winter Park, Florida
Big E Langston def. Seth Rollins {NXT Championship No Disqualifcation Match}
From NXT 151. It seems that this was made a no DQ match because Rollins’ defense against Corey Graves ended in a DQ when the Shield interfered. Since Dusty Rhodes was a babyface it’s a bit confusing that he wouldn’t add different stipulation, that the title could change hands on a DQ, instead of this. As it is the Shield attacks after the first few minutes. From a logic perspective this makes no sense, but from a character perspective it’s clear that it was done to make Langston look like a superhero. That’s pretty much compromised when the whole babyface roster pulls Dean Ambrose and Roman Reigns to the back. The rest of the match is Langston kicking out of the standing Sliced Bread, then reversing a second attempt to the Big Ending and winning the title at 6:38 (shown of 10:08). Kind of a nothing match, but I’m stoked to see Langston in real matches from now on. **½
June 12, 2013 – Winter Park, Florida
Bo Dallas def. Big E Langston {NXT Championship Match}
From NXT 173. Dallas is pretty definitively over as a heel. The match actually had a really story, with Dallas getting tossed around like everyone else, but then showing just a little more effort so that he lasted as long as Conor O’Brian rather than all the other squashed geeks. But the exposed turnbuckle finish was pretty weak, mostly because Dallas didn’t actually pull the turnbuckle pad all the way off. Dallas hit the Belly to Belly suplex for the win at 7:46. I’m happy that we can, presumably, have consistent title matches now (Langston and Rollins before him got called up to the main roster while they were still champions). **½
February 27, 2014 – Winter Park, Florida
Adrian Neville def. Bo Dallas {NXT Championship Ladder Match}
From Arrival. I have mixed feelings about ladder matches. This one was neat. Neville was determined to get something good out of Dallas, and the champion seemed game enough. They didn’t reinvent the wheel or meet HBK’s (who had come out to promote a DVD before the match) legacy, but they gave the fans an exciting little main event to cap the show. I like this as a main event because it represents the final transition from the FCW era to the NXT/Network era. Neville got the belt at 15:46. ***½
December 11, 2014 – Winter Park, Florida
Sami Zayn def. Adrian Neville {NXT Championship Match}
From Takeover: R Evolution. Zayn’s career was on the line if he didn’t win the title. Zayn’s career being on the line was self-imposed, and could only be enforced by him. I don’t know what I would have thought of this one if it wasn’t for the crowd. In today’s “shades of grey” atmosphere, you really don’t get crowd support for one guy like this, and heat for his opponent just because he’s the obstacle in their hero’s way. The match told a great story too, with Zayn feeling like he should be more ruthless because his scruples had been holding him back, but then it was sticking to his moral ways that won him the match in the end. I still think this was a few minutes too long and thus not as good as their title match on “TV,” but it was a beautiful culmination for the wonderful feud. Zayn hit the Helluva Kick at 23:55 for the win. ****
February 11, 2015 – Winter Park, Florida
Kevin Owens def. Sami Zayn {NXT Championship Match}
From Takeover: Rival. I didn’t really care for this match. Sure, it had an effective narrative which saw Owens be a prick who would abuse his friend to the point that he’d win the title by referee stop. But that finish is heatless and there was nothing in the overlong match to build to it until the last five minutes. Points for hitting each other real hard some, I suppose. This feud was a bit problematic like that. The build was great, but necessitated Owens being rather emotionless and stilted. Things turned around for him and the title in a huge way once he moved beyond Zayn. Owens won at 23:12 after hitting five powerbombs because the referee stopped the match. ***
July 4, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan
Finn Balor def. Kevin Owens {NXT Championship Match}
From Beast in the East. This was dramatic as all get out. When I watched it the first time (for context) as I was going through the Takeover shows, I felt it was the best match under the NXT banner to date. I still feel that way, though this match wouldn’t have that claim for long. Balor hit the Coup de Gras for the win at 19:32. Tatsumi Fujinami celebrated with Balor after the match, but Owens wouldn’t shake Balor’s hand. Their ladder match at Takeover: Brooklyn was better, a rare thing for me because as I mentioned above, I don’t really like ladder matches. ****¼
April 21, 2016 – Lowell, Massachusetts
Samoa Joe def. Finn Balor {NXT Championship Match}
From a house show, available to view on the NXT From Secret to Sensation DVD..Samoa Joe got a totally unearned title shot and actually won the thing after failing to do so before. In hindsight, Finn Balor’s title reign was kind of bad. Yes, he had a few great matches, but in his nearly 10-month (the longest for four years) reign he averaged a title defense once every other month. That’s lame. And then he lost it to a guy he’d already beaten twice and he did that on a house show. Basically it’s a lighter house show version of their killer Takeover matches. Joe won with the Muscle Buster. ***¾
August 20, 2016 – Brooklyn, New York
Shinsuke Nakamura def. Samoa Joe {NXT Championship Match}
From Takeover: Brooklyn II. The main event of the first Brooklyn show is my favorite NXT match to date, so this had a lot to live up to and couldn’t really measure up. I will say that Joe sells like nobody else, which is fantastic for his character because he spends so much time looking invulnerable, but when the armor is cracked the selling makes the loss believable. That said, this could have stood to lose five minutes in the middle, as it had my mind wandering. These two didn’t have the best chemistry, and it was later revealed that Joe’s selling came from a legit injury to his jaw. Nakamura won at 21:14 with the Kinshasa. ***½
November 19, 2016 – Toronto, Ontario
Samoa Joe def. Shinsuke Nakamura {NXT Championship Match}
From Takeover: Toronto. Early on in this match I was ready to complain about a fight on the floor with no count-out being applied until Corey Graves explained it away on commentary. That’s a great example of how announcers can make a match better. This was more of a heavyweight clobberfest than their previous match, but again I think it was overlong and I feel that these two have a better bout in them. Luckily it seems like there will be a rubber match. After I wrote that, it turned out that there was a rubber match and that these two didn’t have a better match in them. This was as good as it gets in terms of Nakamura vs. Joe. Not bad by normal standards at all, but by the unrealistic standards set by NXT pre-2020, it’s not the best. Joe won in 20:11 with the Muscle Buster. ***¾
December 3, 2016 – Osaka, Osaka
Shinsuke Nakamura def. Samoa Joe {NXT Championship Match}
Shown in full on NXT 370. I’d mentioned that I had hopes that a Nakamura vs. Samoa Joe rubber match would outdo their previous matches. Well it really didn’t. A weird crowd (who even are Japanese NXT/WWE fans?) and a general house-show vibe meant it was quite a bit weaker than their previous matches. I wonder if they can do any better when Joe gets his final rematch in Australia (it was pretty much the same, but in a cage). Nakamura won at 26:28 with the Kinshasa. ***
January 28, 2017 – San Antonio, Texas
Bobby Roode def. Shinsuke Nakamura {NXT Championship Match}
From Takeover: San Antonio. So can Shinsuke put on a bigger spectacle with Roode than he did with Joe in the disappointing matches in Osaka and Melbourne? No, of course not, because Roode isn’t good enough for this top spot on the card. And someone involved in the booking must agree, because the match-stopping injury angle is the only way they could credibly move the belt to him. I guess we’re in for a stretch of shows with mediocre main events. Sidenote: Corey Graves clearly loves Game of Thrones and I already miss him on commentary. And then later I wrote that my love for Graves was diminished by his less-than-stellar commentary on the weekly show compared to Takeover, and also I hadn’t been exposed to the glory of Mauro Ranallo yet. Even later than that I soured on Ranallo as well. Roode is still a snooze but thankfully this turned out to be the worst of his Takeover main events and the rest were a little better from here. He had a much better rematch with Nakamura on the following Takeover. As a matter of fact, in my opinion this is the worst Takeover title change. Langston vs. Rollins and vs. Dallas were worse, but they were short TV matches. Lots of people hate Karrion Kross vs. Keith Lee, but this is worse than that I think. **¾
Two months later, NXT updated all of their championship belts, including this one. That’s as good of a reason as any to break up the reviews right here. See you in the next one!