History of the NXT Championship | Part 2 | Final Beat

Another reminder that you can read my full history of NXT archive here. We come back to NXT on the precipice of them going from internet favorite to indie scene-reaping, best bout machine.

August 19, 2017 – Brooklyn, New York

Drew McIntyre def. Bobby Roode {NXT Championship Match}
From Takeover: Brooklyn III. McIntyre is a big big boy, and big boys sometimes shouldn’t wrestle long matches. It’s not that McIntyre seemed blown up, but like many NXT main events, this was longer than it needed to be for the story it was telling. In this case it was basically twice as long as it needed to be and while it was competent enough, it was rather soulless. And that’s really not a great kind of match to have when you’re crowning a new champion and then setting him up against the Ring of Honor invasion army. That said, it’s cool that there’s an ROH invasion army. And even if they look really small compared to McIntyre, the post-match angle had kind of a R4dicalz vibe to it. They looked REALLY small compared to McIntyre. McIntyre hit the Claymore Kick (which is really just the Sick Kick) at 22:26 for the win. ***¼ 

November 18, 2017 – Houston, Texas

Andrade Cien Almas def. Drew McIntyre {NXT Championship Match}
From Takeover: War Games. It was so nice of McIntyre to stop by NXT and transition the title from Roode to Almas. This match was pretty good, working well around the fact that McIntyre is a big big boy. The finish was pretty sloppy, but it got the job done. I wish they’d built up Almas a bit more before giving him the title, as he really only had two big singles wins going into this, and he never won a contender’s match. But then, his gimmick is kind of that he’s a cheater so I guess it works. Almas hit a DDT for the win at 14:43. ***½ 

April 7, 2018 – New Orleans, Louisiana

Aleister Black def. Andrade Cien Almas {NXT Championship Match}
From Takeover: New Orleans. It’s fun when a match builds off of previous matches. And while this didn’t necessarily build off of their first match (which was Black’s debut), it did build off of Almas’s matches against Drew McIntyre and Johnny Gargano, so that was neat. It was also nice to see Zelina Vega be the cause of Almas’s loss, since she was such a big part of all of his wins. This was a good, simple angle that was well-defined and didn’t need any stupid, extra crap that didn’t make sense. Black hit the Black Mass at 18:20 for the win. **** 

July 25, 2018 – Winter Park, Florida

Tommaso Ciampa def. Aleister Black {NXT Championship Match}
From NXT 460. Ciampa can do no wrong right now. This match was incredible. In 2018 Ciampa is over as a legitimate hated heel and everything he touches turns to wrestling gold. He was totally in Black’s head here, something we haven’t seen happen when Black has faced anyone else (except Sullivan to some extent). Because of that and because Ciampa was also in Johnny Gargano’s head, he was able to win the title. I had a knee jerk reaction to knock off a bit for all the gaga at the end, but as I’m writing this I realize that it absolutely made the match better. Ciampa hit the Fairy Tale Ending at 22:18 for the win. ****¾

April 5, 2019 – Brooklyn, New York

Johnny Gargano def. Adam Cole {NXT Championship 2/3 Falls Match}
From Takeover: New York. In the building, Cole was way more over with the crowd than Gargano was. In the finishing stretch, people in my section were getting very upset every time Gargano kicked out, and to be honest he kicked out of so many killer Cole moves that it felt like overkill. On rewatch it really didn’t feel like overkill at all. Let’s unpack this thing because there’s a lot here. First you have Cole, an arrogant prick leader of a group that isn’t afraid to get involved in one another’s matches, who has told his opponent that his Takeover milestones and his teammates will help carry him to victory. Then you have Gargano, whose months-long plan to get another title shot against his arch nemesis seemingly went up in flames when said nemesis went down with a possibly career-ending injury. Those two stories crashed together here in spectacular fashion, as Gargano absorbed everything that Cole threw at him, caught on to Cole’s patterns, and tapped him out twice to win the title. What makes his title win here all the more satisfying is that he didn’t have to sacrifice his ethics to do it. After months of cheating and losing or cheating only to win the secondary title, he won like a man and got the biggest prize of all (while Cole lost even though he cheated as much as he could). Gargano won with the GargaNo Escape at 38:15. After the match, as Gargano celebrates with Candice LeRae and his family, Tommaso Ciampa comes out and congratulates his best friend. With his career possibly over, there’s no more need for competitive animosity. The spectre of Ciampa hung heavy over this match, with both Gargano and Cole using moves from the former champ’s arsenal to play mind games and get an advantage. While this wasn’t the ending to the Gargano/Ciampa story we were expecting, it was very satisfying given the circumstances. *****

June 1, 2019 – Bridgeport, Connecticut

Adam Cole def. Johnny Gargano {NXT Championship Match}
From Takeover: XXV. Josiah Williams comes out with Cole and sings his Wrestle & Flow version of his entrance song. The chemistry between Cole and Gargano is almost obscene. Beyond that, everything they do makes logical sense in a way that wrestling rarely attempts. Little things like Cole bailing out of the ring the second he sees Gargano posing before hitting his big thrust kick are what sets matches like this apart from everything else in NXT right now (a high bar). Building the match around the complicated Panama Sunrise was another nice touch. There were so many times I believed that this match could end, but it ended at the perfect time. Cole hit the Last Shot at 31:47 to make that happen. Gargano looked like a beast in the loss too, taking Cole’s arm every single time it was exposed, but Cole was just that much smarter and able to grow every seed he planted into a beautiful victory flower. This was remarkably different from their last Takeover match, but it was every bit as good. I may even like it more. The commentators try to sell Cole as a Triple Crown Champion now, but that’s pretty hollow since he never won the tag titles and just subbed in for an injured colleague. *****

During Cole’s reign, AEW put their show Dynamite on Wednesday nights, so NXT and USA worked together to take their one-hour, commercial-free weekly show from the WWE Network to the USA Network. They also added an hour and commercials, as cable networks do. The quality of the show slowly faltered, and then the COVID-19 pandemic hit and things took a dive creatively. It was a real bummer. 

July 8, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida

Keith Lee def. Adam Cole {NXT Championship vs. NXT North American Championship Match}
From the Great American Bash, Part 2. Remember when WCW commentators on Nitro spoiled a pre-taped title change on Raw, causing 300,000 viewers to change the channel to see Mankind win the belt? Well the AEW braintrust on their YouTube show advertised NXT’s pre-taped title change spoiler for this show, and I just can’t understand why they’d give the free press to NXT when they’re own competing title match had to be delayed a week. Maybe it won’t hurt them, but why risk it for the sake of an unfunny joke? Whatever, this match ruled. Cole is incredible. I love the way he’d scream while pinning Lee after hitting his finishers, as if doing so would add extra leverage. You never see stuff like that and it actually adds a lot. I also loved that Cole was on defense for basically the entire match, but once he started getting the advantage he knew that he had to just go for finisher after finisher in that moment because he wouldn’t get another chance to win. But that wound up costing him, because in skipping a Last Shot pin in favor of a second Panama Sunrise attempt he got hit with the Spirit Bomb. One Supernova later and Lee became a double champion at 19:55. Oh, and Lee getting the win immediately after turning the tide works well too because it meant that the Undisputed Era didn’t have a chance to interfere. Great match. Karrion Kross and Scarlett are briefly shown watching Lee celebrate. ****

August 22, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida

Karrion Kross def. Keith Lee {NXT Championship Match}
The video package for this match is the best one they’ve done in a long time. This was a solid heavyweight slug-em-up, but not a great one. Kross isn’t a wrestler in the style of NXT, and he got injured here, so it had a lot going against it as a main event. As such, I don’t think it needed to go twenty minutes, but I suppose that helped to keep Lee strong in the loss. I was never bored, but I never felt my butt fall off either. Kross won the title with a second rope Doomsday Saito Suplex at 21:50. Hopefully it’s just a matter of time before Lee ends up on Raw or Smackdown. ***

September 9, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida

Finn Balor def. Adam Cole {NXT Championship Match}
From Super Tuesday II. This was a spiritual overtime to an Iron Man Match the week before (which also featured Ciampa and Gargano). That match ended 2-2-1-1 with Cole and Balor tied. Like most things in 2020, this didn’t quite measure up to it’s 2019 counterpart. It was good, but the commercial breaks made it hard to lock in. Also, Cole kicked out of the Coup de Gras and the commentators made it out to be a huge deal, but moments later Cole was totally fine. I guess I could chalk that up to Balor’s leg being worked over. Balor’s selling was terrific though, and that might be enough for me to overlook some of this match’s faults. Balor hit an avalanche 1916 for the win and the title at 17:05 (shown of 23:10). ****