June 27, 2012 – Winter Park, Florida
Seth Rollins def. Jiro
Whatever happened to Marek Brave? I’m not sure what the benefit was of having Jiro flown over from Kaientai Dojo for short squashes like this, but I guess he was on his way out of the company anyway. ½*
Jinder Mahal def. Jason Jordan
The one benefit of squash matches is that they’re too short to be boring. Well, this failed that. Jordan got one hope spot, but that didn’t make this any more worthwhile. Good to know Mahal was dull as hell from the start. ¼*
Leo Kruger def. Aiden English
The future Adam Rose started with an African gimmick, because he’s from South Africa, you see. This is out of touch even by WWE standards. The idea was apparently that he was related to a former South African president. Dangerous stuff. Anyway, English basically got nothing and the crowd couldn’t possibly care less about these squashes. ½*
Connor O’Brian & Kenneth Cameron def. Jey Uso & Jimmy Uso
I forgot how gimmicky the Usos used to be. At least both teams got an entrance, so presumably we’ll get a real match out of the deal. It wasn’t much, but at least it was competitive and got the crowd involved. I still don’t understand the Ascension, and apparently neither does Jim Ross on commentary. That makes me feel better about my connection to wrestling, but makes me feel worse about the prospect of watching these first few years of NXT creations. **¼
Richie Steamboat def. Rick Victor
Best squash of the night thus far, though Jim Ross suggesting that Steamboat coined the term Sling Blade for his finisher when it’s been called that for years by better wrestlers is pretty annoying. Also I’m trying not to get too invested in what will turn out to be a sadly short career. *½
Antonio Cesaro def Dante Dash
Cesaro had already debuted on the main roster at this point, so I’m not sure what the point of this match on an already overstuffed show is. Dash got zero offense. Did WWE think NXT was already getting a lot of eyeballs, and that a win for Cesaro in front of a silent crowd would do him some good? ½*
Johnny Curtis vs. Derrick Bateman
This was straight up too many matches for a 45-minute show. There are fewer than five minutes left in this show when the bell rings. Good thing they made time for that Cesaro segment. This match didn’t really hold my attention, but I appreciate that it was a real match with real wrestlers who did real moves to each other and had a real plan. I didn’t so much appreciate that it was a relic of preboot-NXT, as this main evented an episode from an era I’d rather forget. Please, no more episodes of TV with seven matches. **