June 19, 2019 – Donington Park, Leicestershire
Aiden English is subbing in for Nigel McGuinness on commentary here so my ears preemptively start to bleed.
Kassius Ohno def. Kenny Williams
The commentators say that Dar has turned his back on Williams, but unless I’m having a total brainfart that never happened on NXT UK TV. In fact, Williams said he doesn’t even mind that Dar is a jerk. This was a lot faster-paced than most of Ohno’s matches, and the finish was very creative (Ohno caught Williams in the ropes and hit the KO elbow from there). **¾
Imperium comes out immediately after the match and chases Ohno away. They’ve got snazzy matching track jackets with their names, hometowns, and flags on them and I love it. The crowd really gives them the business. Alexander Wolfe explains that he joined Imperium because they treat wrestling with respect. WALTER announces that his title match against Travis Banks will happen next week. He’s not worried about Banks, so Banks out and cuts a cookie cutter promo.
Noam Dar hangs up on his mum (after complaining about the loud concert the show is being held at), to address accusations that he took a dive in his tag title match with Kenny Williams. Dar denies it. Williams walks by and Dar tells him he’ll have better luck if he comes under his wing. Williams tells Dar to get his act together. What the hell were the commentators talking about earlier tonight when they said Dar turned his back on Williams?
Mark Coffey & Wolfgang def. Primate & Wild Boar
English notices that Boar’s eyes are black which leads to a lame conversation about that. This guy is so bad on commentary it’s almost unbelievable. This match started out as an energetic brawl, and though things turned a little basic after that the crowd dug everything and both teams were really over. I also like that the Hunt’s undoing is how erratic and distractible they are. Joe Coffey comes out after the match to keep beating on the Hunt. Dave Mastiff makes the save because he’s probably Boar’s dad (and also because he hates Gallus but that’s less important). **½
Mustache Mountain are told that they’ll get their tag title rematch in two weeks. Their joy is stifled because they know they have to deal with Imperium in addition to the Grizzled Young Veterans, and Pete Dunne isn’t around right now.
Kay Lee Ray def. Xia Brookside, Rhea Ripley, Piper Niven, Candy Floss, Killer Kelly, Jinny, Isla Dawn, Jazzy Gabert, Nina Samuels, Rhio, and Kanji {Number One Contender Battle Royal}
Thankfully, a lot of the entrances happened during a commercial break (unlike at Worlds Collide when they showed all of them and bored me to death). The only drawback is that Rhio and Kanji are debuting here and I could have used entrances from them to give me a sense of their personalities. They’re the first two eliminated (by Gebert) so maybe I shouldn’t expect much from them. KLR got tossed between the ropes early, spent most of the match on the floor, and then came back at the end to win the thing by last eliminating Brookside (who had seemingly won by eliminating Niven and Ripley). Niven & Brookside got a huge reaction when they teamed up to eliminate Gabert and then Jinny. This was a really well-structured battle royal, playing up the various storylines going on, and highlighting that this brand has three distinct and interesting women’s angles happening at once. What other mixed-gender wrestling company is doing that? Even Kelly seemingly botching her exit from the match is made to help Ripley look like a monster. All battle royals should be this well-planned out. ***¼