September 14, 2016 – Winter Park, Florida
Gran Metalik def Zack Sabre Jr. {Semifinal Match}
Once again, every time it looks like Metalik is moving half a step behind and is about to botch a spot, he’s really just setting up for the match to transition away from him. That’s absolutely brilliant and something I’m not sure I’ve seen anyone else do as consistently. Metalik won this bonkers match, filled with crazy reversal combos and brilliant flying, at 13:15 with the Metalik Driver. ****
TJ Perkins def. Kota Ibushi {Semifinal Match}
I like that by this point, Ibushi was seen as inevitable and thus Perkins beating him was seen as a huge upset. In line with that, Ibushi was outclassing Perkins for much of the match, with Perkins doing just enough to stay alive. The best touch in the match was Ibushi hitting the Golden Star Bomb and being so sure about winning that he counted along with the ref on his fingers. No wonder people worship this guy. I believed in so many of the false finishes all these years later. Perkins won after 14:51 with an insane STF in the best match of the tournament. ****½
Johnny Gargano & Tommaso Ciampa def. Noam Dar & Cedric Alexander
This was crazy fast-paced. Maybe a little too fast-paced, as there were a couple of miscues that could have been easily avoided. The last couple of moves that Ciampa kicked out of down the stretch also didn’t feel believable, and probably should have ended the match. Aside from those qualms, this was a hell of a sprint and a nice palate-cleanser after some weak episodes of NXT TV. Gargano & Ciampa won in 9:49 with Meeting in the Middle on Dar. ***½
TJ Perkins def. Gran Metalik {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Match}
Triple H came out before the match to announce that the tournament winner wouldn’t just get a trophy, but would also be the inaugural WWE Cruiserweight Champion (new lineage, later the NXT Cruiserweight Championship) and would begin defending the title against other Cruiserweights on Raw. Metalik hit a suicide dive headbutt in this match. I don’t know if it was on purpose and I don’t care; it was gnarly and I loved it. The story here was simple, both guys were motivated to kick out of every move, so they had to start going for crazier and crazier maneuvers. That wound up biting Metalik, as an avalanche Metalik Driver failed and Perkins caught him in the anklelock for the win and the title at 17:50. ****
That’s a wrap on the tournament. I’ll go ahead and encourage you to scour the upcoming NXT TV reviews to catch my takes on every Cruiserweight Championship match going forward.