November 14, 2018 – Birmingham, West Midlands
This venue looks a little less indirific than the last one, so that’s good. The show starts with eight lady wrestlers standing on the ramp. Triple H and Johnny Saint join them and reveal the NXT UK Women’s Championship. This was meant to be an announcement by Saint, but Triple H said most of the words and all Saint said was, “Okay, I’m ready.” It’s like Jack Tunney reborn over there. The commentators are rightly building up Toni Storm as the tournament favorite, so let’s hope they build a good story around that.
Jordan Devlin def. Sid Scala
Scala got a little more here than he has before, but Devlin more or less squashed him and I don’t review squashes. Devlin’s finisher is going to end up hurting someone bigger than Scala. After the match, Devlin complains about how goofy Ligero is. N/A
Saxon Huxley & Joseph Connors def. Kenny Williams & Amir Jordan
These seemingly random pairs were motivated by Mustache Mountain’s desire for the best opposition when the NXT UK Tag Team Championships become a reality. It’s probably going to come down to the Mountain vs. the Coffeys anyway, but we do need tournament fodder. This was alright, especially given that Huxley is rather boring and Connors only came in to execute the finish. The babyfaces are plucky and fun. **½
Trent Seven officially challenges Zack Gibson to a match next week. He calls himself a professional wrestler, so look for him to get fired before too long.
Tyler Bate def. James Drake
Nigel McGuinness was weird on commentary here, saying that Bate was recovering “toward the end of the match here.” How would a wrestling commentator know, in kayfabe terms, when a match was nearing its end? Anyway, Drake could have been anyone here, as he controlled with chinlocks until Bate let loose and did his thing. That’s actually a little unfair, because Drake brought some fun offense near the end, but those chinlocks really rubbed me the wrong way. **¾
Wolfgang def. Ashton Smith
Woflgang has been in the majority of NXT UK main events since it began, and I think that’s a major flaw in the brand. Smith always looks like he’s crying. I guess this was solid by Wolfgang’s standards, but it was pretty short and nothing of major interest happened. This episode was the weakest hour associated with NXT in quite a while. **½