October 26, 2016 – Winter Park, Florida
Tommaso Ciampa & Johnny Gargano def. Ho Ho Lun & Tian Bing {First Round Match}
Bing’s WWE career has been pretty much identical to Dan Matha’s, wherein he has this one NXT appearance then disappears until resurfacing in an Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal. This match was short and fine. The crowd loves DIY, which is neat. **¼
Aliyah def. Billie Kay
Kay’s selling is some of the worst I’ve ever seen, and Aliyah’s offense is such that when Todd Phillips says things like, “Aliyah hits a bicycle kick, I think.” Liv Morgan distracts Kay and her buddy Peyton Royce, giving Aliyah the win. Royce and Kay beat both ladies up after the match. ¾*
Tye Dillinger def. Noah Potjes
I don’t review squashes, and I’d like to not review Potjes matches. Roode attacks Dillinger after the match because NXT is in recycle-heel-attacks mode right now. The crowd cares zero about this, which is appropriate. N/A
Asuka def. Thea Trinidad
Another Asuka match, another squash. After the match, William Regal comes out to tell Asuka that she’s going to face Mickey James at Takeover: Toronto. Asuka seems excited about it. I remember nothing about James, including the match they go on to have in Toronto (which I’ve already seen). N/A
Kota Ibushi & TJ Perkins def. Mustafa Ali & Lince Dorado {First Round Match}
Spots spots spots spots spots spots, everybody! They were very fun spots though. Perkins is subbing in for the injured Hideo Itami. Perkins says the words “The Cool Kids Table” in a pre-match interview, so he’s my favorite wrestler now. He also has Megaman-esque entrance music, so I’m doubling down on that claim. These cruiserweight boys put on a nice, fast-paced match that was a welcome change of pace from the rest of the show. ***¼
And now we turn to a pair of matches that were released on the WWE Network as part of their Hidden Gems series. This time around it’s a feature for Japanese wrestlers. It was their way of tipping their hat and/or competing with New Japan’s Wrestle Kingdom show, which happened the day after these hit the network in 2019.
October 30, 2016 – Los Angeles, California
Bobby Roode def. Kota Ibushi
This was really slow by Ibushi’s standards, and he moved at Roode’s pace. I’ll never understand the hype for Roode. The crowd was more into this than I was by a mile, and I think part of the issue is that WWE doesn’t mic the rings at house shows so the strikes don’t seem as impactful. Here though, it’s baffling because they actually were filming matches from this show for TV, and those TV episodes had decent sound from in the ring! That said, this was solid but one-dimensional and a lot slower than it could have been. **¾
Shinsuke Nakamura def. Samoa Joe & Eric Young {NXT Championship Triple Threat Match}
The lack of in-ring sound in this match was a lot less detrimental than it was in the last match simply because the strikes were far more convincing here. The triple threat format also allowed for more consistent action. I liked this a lot more than I expected to (I was sure going into this matches that I’d prefer Roode vs. Ibushi to this), and frankly I think it’s better than their matches from Osaka and Melbourne. I guess we can at least partially thank Young for that. ***½
Overall, I’m not sure what the thinking was in putting out these matches in the face of Wrestle Kingdom. Either they were delusional and thought these were excellent, which was a mistake and would push people to watch New Japan World to see these guys in better matches, or they were cynical and figured that showing mediocre to good-but-not-amazing matches would make people think that New Japan is over-hyped. Either way, seems like a strange way to go.
And now here’s two more bonus matches, a pair of cruiserweight matches because the Cruiserweight Championship is now an NXT title and I’m reviewing every title defense of the WWE/NXT Cruiserweight Championship and post them on the NXT TV reviews that preceded them. This week we’ve got a pair of matches, from Hell in a Cell 2016 and Raw the following night.
October 30, 2016 – Boston, Massachusetts
Brian Kendrick def. TJ Perkins {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Match}
It took them a while to get into a groove, and once they did the crowd was unwilling to show them any love. In a spot that went on way too long, Kendrick faked a leg injury to lure Perkins into a headbutt that led directly to the Captain’s Hook, giving Kendrick the title at 10:29. This division really needed to allow the wrestlers to let it all hang out on PPV, but instead they were used as the cool-down match and that totally didn’t work. **½
October 31, 2016 – Hartford, Connecticut
TJ Perkins def. Brian Kendrick {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Match}
Kendrick cut a dull promo before the match, hitting us over the head with the story of how he beat Perkins by playing to his sympathies. Perkins won this one by count out in 6:30 (shown), so the title stayed on Kendrick. Kendrick got counted out on purpose, though the finish was extra crappy because Kendrick was actually back in the ring when he “decided to lose on purpose.” A bad idea, poorly executed, after a couple minutes of good action. Perkins attacks Kendrick after the match. *¾