November 30, 2016 – Ottawa, Ontario
Asuka def. Nicole Matthews
I don’t review squashes. Later, Asuka says that her attitude hasn’t changed (she was asked this because she didn’t shake hands with Mickey James after their Takeover match) but that she just doesn’t think there’s any competition for her title. N/A
Eric Young def. No Way Jose
They’ve been doing a LOT of this heel-wrestler’s-ally-distracts-the-ref-allowing-the-heel-to-get-the-win finish, and it’s already tired. The rest of the match was standard Eric Young fare. **½
Samoa Joe def. Tye Dillinger
Dillinger slapped Joe backstage to goad him into this match. He said before the match that if he can’t compete with Joe, he’s not sure he should be in NXT. This was WAY too long for how one-sided it was. Dillinger’s few moments of offense were very exciting for the hometown crowd, but we didn’t need twelve minutes of a fifteen-minute match in which Joe was in control. ***
Wow, not much happened in this episode. And now, 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, here’s the title defense from the second episode of 205 Live.
December 6, 2016 – Houston, Texas
Rich Swann def. Brian Kendrick {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Match}
Kendrick blamed a lack of training on his title loss the week before. TJ Perkins was at commentary during the match, though he spent more time arguing with Austin Aries than he did integrating into the championship storyline. After an intense little match, Kendrick got launched onto Perkins, which lead to Swann hitting the roundhouse kick for the win at 12:43. Alright then. Their first match was more compelling, but this one was better than everything they’d been doing on PPV up until this point. ***