July 13, 2016 – Winter Park, Florida
In October of 2019, the WWE Cruiserweight Championship was renamed the NXT Cruiserweight Championship. As such I’m going back to where it all began and reviewing the Cruiserweight Classic and every subsequent defense of the title (reviews of those defenses will appear in reviews of the NXT flagship episodes that take place close to when the defenses occurred because that’s how I like to do things) so that I can be caught up on its lineage.
What a quaint time, when Corey Graves was just in the control room and wasn’t insufferable. Speaking of not yet insufferable, Mauro Ranallo actually makes conversation with Daniel Bryan on commentary rather than just shouting forced pop culture references into my ears.
Gran Metalik def. Alejandro Saez {First Round Match}
Saez was just not that impressive here. If this is the best that Chile has to offer then it’s no wonder there’s no wrestling scene there. A shooting star press to the floor doesn’t make up for his ridiculous facial expressions and lack of ring awareness. Metalik did some really wacky and wild stuff and looked much more comfortable throughout the match. He wins in 4:04 with the Metalik Driver. **¼
Ho Ho Lun def. Ariya Daivari {First Round Match}
Lun won this one with a German suplex at 5:04. There was very little to this one, and I’m worried now that the entire first round will be all about getting rid of the dead weight that was brought in just to be able to say that 16 countries were represented. *¾
Cedric Alexander def. Clement Petroit {First Round Match}
This was a fun bop, thanks almost entirely to Alexander. Petroit wasn’t bad by any stretch, but he was really just there to let Alexander have someone to do his thing against. Alexander hit the Lumbar Check at 5:59 to get the win. **¼
Kota Ibushi def. Sean Maluta {First Round Match}
Low Ki got a name-drop here, as Low Ki. That kind of irritates me because in-universe he was Kaval, and let’s be real that name is no more stupid than Low Ki. On commentary, Bryan pointed out how many neck bumps Ibushi was taking here and the fact that he’d just recovered from a herniated disc in his neck. He talks about being worried about Ibushi’s neck quite a bit here. Three years later it still seems like this guy has a death wish. Still, you can’t deny how natural he is in the ring. This was also the most impressed I’ve ever been by Maluta, which is kind of a bummer because chronologically it’s the oldest match I’ve seen from him, so it was all downhill from here. Ibushi hits the Golden Star Powerbomb for the win at 9:40. ***¼