NXT 467

September 5, 2018 – Winter Park, Florida

Kassius Ohno def. Kona Reeves
I don’t review squashes, but I’m relieved to see that Reeves is just getting squashed now. After the match, Ohno comes to the realization that the reason there’s no buzz around him anymore is because someone flashy and new is always debuting. So he’s going to put the next new guy down. Guess that means he’s going to feud with Keith Lee or Matt Riddle. N/A

Steve Cutler & Wesley Blake def. Angelo Dawkins & Montez Ford
This was actually a pretty good tag match before the Mighty ran out in balaclavas to distract the Street Profits and give the Forgotten Sons the win. The Sons showed some cool tag team offense here, and the Profits were their usual fun selves. ***

William Regal mostly clears Heavy Machinery in his Amsterdam Black attack investigation, but Otis Dozovic cracks under the pressure and admits to clogging the toilet in the Performance Center. Is that what “I’m coming!” means?

After the main event last week, Ricochet and Pete Dunne both blame the other for the loss. Now they want each other’s titles. So in two weeks the face off in the title versus title match.

Kairi Sane def. Trish Adora
I don’t review squashes, but how can anyone do anything but love Sane? Shayna Baszler comes out after the match to let Sane know she’s got a rematch owed to her. She tries to attack Sane but the champ fights her off. N/A

Thanks to Lars Sullivan, EC3 is out of action. Sullivan says he was trying to get to Black a few weeks ago, but when he arrived in the Full Sail parking lot Black had already been laid out. Sullivan points the finger at the Undisputed Era. Regal laments Sullivan’s rage at EC3 (who had implicated Sullivan in the attack) and books him against Raul Mendoza next week in response to Sullivan’s attack on Mendoza last week.

Velveteen Dream def. Johnny Gargano
This sputtered to start and then holy crap did they bring the DRAMA. Gargano kept phasing in and out of psycho mode, clearly suffering from PTSD due to his battles with Tommaso Ciampa. Dream used this to his advantage, capitalizing on the trauma and the fact that half the crowd agreed with Dream’s Johnny Failure moniker from last week. In the end he used the triggering nickname to bait Gargano into his finisher. The detail that I love the most is the last time Gargano had this issue in a match, he fought and beat EC3. But we know Dream is better than EC3 because he holds a win over him, so it stands to reason that he’d be better at handling Gargano than EC3 was. Who is telling better in-match stories than Gargano right now? Nobody, that’s who. ****¼