NXT 368

December 8, 2016 – Melbourne, Victoria

Shinsuke Nakamura def. Samoa Joe {NXT Championship Steel Cage Match}
About half of this match is clipped out, so I’m reviewing this based on the full match shown on an episode a few weeks later. This is Joe’s final NXT match, I believe. Actually, with the exception of an odd match here and there, all NXT Champions leave shortly after their title reigns end. It’s kind of a bummer that his final televised matches were from a pair of glorified house shows, because they gave the impression that he and Nakamura were bored of wrestling each other. But the sad truth is that this rivalry gave us diminishing returns since Toronto, and this final match was kind of boring. The finish, with Nakamura closing the cage door to pin Joe, was a nice thumb in the eye of escape rules, so I’ll give them points for that. **¾

December 14, 2016 – Winter Park, Florida

Daria Berenato wants to hurt Peyton Royce or Billie Kay after they abandoned her in their six-woman tag match. They get to decide which one of them gets beat up.

The rest of the matches on this episode are qualifying matches to get into a Fatal Four Way Number 1 Contender Match for a NXT Championship shot.

Tye Dillinger def. Eric Young
Nikki Cross runs in and attacks Dillinger about a minute into the match, getting Young disqualified. If you’re Young, aren’t you mad at Cross for this gaffe? Dillinger looks to be getting the better of SAnitY in a post-match skirmish, but Big Damo runs out to help SAnitY again. Damo actually has the posture of a gorilla, which I find endlessly fascinating. ½*

Andrade Cien Almas def. No Way Jose
Eh, this was fine. Not sure what we’re supposed to expect from a sub-five-minute match between these guys. All of these qualifying matches are short, actually, which makes me wonder if the 4-way was originally going to immediately follow them before they got the idea to plop the cage match on this episode. *¾

Roderick Strong def. Elias Samson
Strong finished this match with the Sick Kick, which is a move name that I came up with. True story. Also a true story, this was Samson’s best match to date, and that’s thanks entirely to Strong being fun pretty much 100 percent of the time. **¼

Bobby Roode def. Oney Lorcan
I like Orcan more than I like Roode, so this did less for me than it might have had it been designed to showcase Lorcan rather than Roode. Still, it wasn’t bad. It wasn’t particularly good and the crowd didn’t particularly care about it, but it wasn’t bad. So it will be Roode vs. Strong vs. Almas vs. Dillinger next week. Could be good. **

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 Roadblock: End of the Line.

December 18, 2016 – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Rich Swann def. Brian Kendrick and TJ Perkins {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Triple Threat Match}
This was a fun little bop, though it didn’t amount to a ton. They didn’t use a lot of shortcuts and put together a few interesting 3-man spots. The match ended when Swann and Perkins double superkicked Kendrick and then Swann immediately hit a roundhouse kick on Perkins for the win at 6:01. After the match Neville comes out and beats up everyone. **¾