December 21, 2016 – Winter Park, Florida
Billie Kay def. Daria Berenato
There was a moment here in which Berenato was throwing jabs at Kay. I liked that moment. I didn’t like anything else. Peyton Royce helped Kay beat Berenato. After the match, the two Aussies call out Asuka. The crowd chanted “no one cares,” during the promo, so that ain’t great. Later, Asuka says that they’re not competition for her. All the while she’s being stalked by Nikki Cross. ½*
Akam & Rezar def. John Ortagun & Anthony Bowens
I don’t review squashes, even ones wherein the referee stops the match because Bowen was knocked silly. That turned out to be a legit concussion injury when Ortagun’s head was powerbombed onto his head. It’s actually pretty cool that the referee shoot realized that guy wasn’t okay and kept him from getting hit by any more moves. N/A
Bobby Roode def. Roderick Strong, Andrade Cien Almas & Tye Dillinger {Four Way Elimination Number One Contender’s Match}
They keep calling it a Fatal Four Way match, but I’ve always thought of the terms “triple threat” and “fatal four way” as non elimination terms. Historically, WWE has called elimination matches with four guys “four corner matches” in the past, and ECW’s three way elimination matches were “three way dances.” So, yeah, I’m going to go with how I’ve always thought of it. The terminology also becomes an issue in how the rules are carried over, as there are no disqualifications in this match, but that’s dumb because since there are eliminations a single person should be able to easily be disqualified. As for the match, Roode is an air conditioner, sucking all the heat out of the room. Luckily, the crowd is more into Dillinger and Strong. Strong eliminated Almas with the Sick Kick, and Todd fucking Philips of all people is the first person to actually say the name (which I coined) of it on TV. Dillinger eliminates Strong moments later with the Tye Breaker. Logic would then dictate Dillinger beating Roode to bury that demon and move forward in his career, but Roode was chosen and Dillinger is a designated choke artist. The finish was weird and flat, but it came after a good, heated exchange between the Canadians and a mostly fun match with the other two as well. ***1/2
And that’s it for regular NXT shows in 2016. My biggest frustration was that only Samoa Joe, Shinsuke Nakamura, and Finn Balor fought for the NXT Championship all year. Not one other person got a title shot. That makes for some monotonous TV, I tell ya. Luckily, it’ll be clear from my 2017 reviews that NXT learned their lesson in that department.