The first show of the year is a throwback to a house show in Australia a month earlier.
December 8, 2016 – Melbourne, Victoria
Dash Wilder & Scott Dawson def. Riddick Moss & Tino Sabbatelli
Weird dynamic here as the crowd was behind the Revival, who seemed a little taken aback at being supported. Other than that this was a pretty basic showcase for the former champions that went twice as long as it needed to. **¼
Buddy Murphy & Tye Dillinger def. Elias Samson & Bobby Roode
Murphy is really playing up the hometown hero thing. Sadly for him, Dillinger is more over. This was the most house-showy of house show matches ever to exist on a house show. From the random pairings to the crowd pandering to the inconsequential nature of the match, this was the pinnacle of house showiness. Maybe that’s a little unfair, as there’s still some good heat behind Dillinger’s revenge mission against Roode. I’m wondering if it will get a real blow off, since Dillinger pinned Samson here. **¾
Ember Moon def. Liv Morgan & Billie Kay {Triple Threat Match}
Kay is very bad. Her selling makes wrestling look fake. When she’s not making it impossible to suspend your disbelief with bad selling and ridiculous punching, she’s cracking her opponents with unsafe elbows and kicks. There was also some goofy three-way crap here that also wasn’t convincing. On the bright side, Morgan seems to have gotten her shit together and Moon’s finisher only scored a 2 on the Contrived Eclipse Scale in this match. *¾
Johnny Gargano & Tommaso Ciampa def. Shane Thorne & Nick Miller {NXT Tag Team Championship Match}
I dig this tag title world tour thing that DIY has going on. There was a decent amount of house show nonsense in this. Like, when Miller powerbombed Thorne to give him more force on a superplex, why sit out with the powerbomb? That only hurts Thorne more. Dumb. The aftermath of that spot was kind of cool though. There were also a couple convincing near-falls for TM61, so that’s cool. This was pretty much on par with the tag match from Japan. ***½
Shinsuke Nakamura def. Samoa Joe {NXT Championship Steel Cage Match}
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