This aired on January 3, 2018 as episode 428 of NXT TV. It’s the documentary portion of a Best of NXT 2017 DVD, with most of the matches being things we’ve seen before on Takeover, etc. There is one match that has never aired on TV before, and it’s an interesting one.
November 17, 2017 – San Antonio, Texas
Drew McIntyre def. Adam Cole {NXT Championship Match}
Shawn Michaels is the special guest referee. I could be suffering from dementia, but I think this is the first time there’s been a guest referee in NXT, at least since the reboot. This was part of that house show that had 3 matches air on episode 423. They couldn’t air this on a regular episode because it was taped the night before McIntyre lost the belt at Takeover. I wonder if it’s weird for Cole that his dad is the ref. Remember this version of HBK as referee? How about this? Or even this? Well thankfully, we only get lazy dad HBK here. I hesitate to even review this match, because it all revolved around Michaels. There were plenty of fun spots, like Cole mimicking HBK and going for a Sweet Chin Music on McIntyre, HBK hitting the thing on Kyle O’Reilly, and HBK eating a superkick. But to call this a match is very generous. I’m going to chicken out and go right down the middle. **½
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 1,285th episode of Raw.
January 8, 2018 – Memphis, Tennessee
Cedric Alexander def. Enzo Amore {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Match}
Alexander won a four way match to qualify for a contender match against Drew Gulak, which he also won, so now he gets this title shot. They don’t even both with the side-by-side competitor introductions here. Most of the match is an Amore chinlock, and then he got deliberately counted out at 5:42. Alexander was meant to get a rematch at the Royal Rumble, but a couple weeks later Amore was accused of sexual assault and harassment and was fired from the company. I think the company made the right move (and Amore’s near-complete absence from the wrestling world has been the right move by all those who blacklist him), but it is rather unsatisfying that nobody ever got to just destroy him on screen. At least we got to see him bleed a little here. *½