NXT 506

May 15, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida

The show starts with Nigel McGuinness & Mauro Ranallo wishing Percy Watson well as he’s left the company, and welcoming Beth Phoenix to the announce booth. She barely speaks throughout the show. Then Erik and Ivar, the Viking Raiders, come to the ring. Ranallo makes a half-hearted attempt to explain the name change, so points for that. The Raiders call out William Regal. I don’t think Regal has actually been in an NXT ring since October. Anyway, the Raiders want to give up the tag titles since they’re not NXT wrestlers anymore and nobody in NXT can beat them. That brings out the Street Profits who think that even though they lost against the Raiders a few weeks ago, they’re sure they can beat them tonight. They also rip on the name change. The Raiders demand the match, and Regal makes it so.

After the show went off the air last week, Adam Cole and Roderick Strong cussed at each other outside of the arena. It looks like the Undisputed Era might be fraying, but tonight it seems that Strong has fully embraced the group by taking out Matt Riddle and delivering one of his flip flops to Cole.

Keith Lee def. Cezar Bononi
I’ve been digging most of Adrian Jaoude’s matches in EVOLVE, so I’m hoping he and Bononi actually get a tag team run in NXT. This was pretty much just a squash for Lee, which wasn’t surprising given that Bononi didn’t even get listed in the social media preview for the show. I wonder if Lee will just be in a holding pattern until Dominik Dijakovic comes back. N/A

Regal has made it known that Shayna Baszler will defend her title against Io Shirai at Takeover. The Forgotten Sons walk up to his office, mad that they’ve been overlooked for a tag title shot.

Kushida def. Kona Reeves
This was a nothing-burger of a match, just there to highlight Drew Gulak coming out to the ramp to sorta kinda distract Kushida. But not enough to make him lose, of course. Gulak had called Kushida a glorified third-stringer taking up space (on a brand that he’s barely involved with…) a couple weeks ago on Twitter, but I don’t like having to do homework to make sense of something on TV. I’m not into how this little rivalry is starting, so let’s hope the eventual Kushida/Gulak match is at least good in the ring. **

Bianca Belair approaches Mia Yim, asking her if she was going to Regal to steal a title match. But Yim wasn’t asking for a title match, she wanted a rematch against Belair. Meanwhile, Riddle is being taped up after the attack at the hands of Strong. Johnny Gargano is with him and says that Riddle is angry now. Gargano knows that he’s also an Undisputed Era target, but he’s ready for his title rematch against Cole at Takeover.

Vanessa Borne def. Jessie
This was a dominant win in short order for Borne, with a little bit of an assist from Aliyah. Jessie still isn’t much to get excited about, and her ring name is really dull. Was Elaban such an offensive last name? *

Erik & Ivar nc. Angelo Dawkins & Montez Ford {NXT Tag Team Championship Match}
This barely got going before the Forgotten Sons ran out and ruined the match. It’s a bummer too, because the crowd was buying every Street Profits near-fall leading up to the non-finish. Oney Lorcan & Danny Burch get into the mix as well. The scene ends with the champs leaving their belts in the ring and heading home. Ranallo and Phoenix tried to string together Game of Thrones quotes to hint at the eventual Takeover match for the tag titles being a ladder match, so keep an eye out for that. **

This was as much of a filler episode of this show as you’re ever going to get these days. I guess that’s what happens when you lose a week’s worth of TV time in your Takeover build thanks to Saudi scheduling.

Because the Cruiserweight Championship is now an NXT title I’m reviewing every title defense of the WWE/NXT Cruiserweight Championship and posting them on the NXT TV reviews that preceded them. Here’s the title defense from Money in the Bank 2019.

May 19, 2019 – Hartford, Connecticut

Tony Nese def. Ariya Daivari {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Match}
Daivari beat Oney Lorcan in a crime against humanity to get this title shot. Holy shit, this was bad. Daivari is actively bad at wrestling, falling all over himself here. Nese is fine, but he was off his game here and let’s be real, he’s not as good as the previous two champions. It’s a slap in the face to everyone who fought in a PPV pre-show title match that this match made it to the main card. They tried to play a trick and do a strong style run to the finish, but that doesn’t cover up eight minutes of trash. Nese won at 9:22 with the Running Nese. *¾