June 19, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida
The Undisputed Era come out to start the show. Adam Cole says that their quest to get all the gold in NXT has begun. Then he shows an all Undisputed Era version of the NXT TV opening. Frankly, it makes more kayfabe sense then the one they’re using now. Velveteen Dream interrupts and tells Cole that he wants the NXT title. Roderick Strong tells Dream that he wants the North American title. That brings out Matt Riddle to wonder why Strong and Cole are talking about titles since they’ve both lost to the Bro. Cole thinks Riddle is jealous and calls him out for trolling Goldberg on twitter. Tyler Breeze makes an appearance to let us know that William Regal has booked a six-man tag match main event.
Damian Priest def. Raul Mendoza
Priest’s entrance is pretty cool, though I’m not sure I understand what his gimmick supposed to be. Amsterdam Black meets Jack Sparrow? Kevin Thorn meets Chris Cornell? Blade meets Katniss Everdeen? I’ll stop. He got a little bit outshined by Mendoza here, but I liked that he never got taken off of his feet and his spin kick move was neat. I think we need some promo time with this fella. N/A
William Regal points out how bloated the Performance Center roster is right now, so he’s booked a tournament for eight wrestlers who have yet to debut on TV. The winner of the NXT Breakout Tournament will get a championship match of their choosing. They introduce each guy AND say what they used to be called, which I think is a nice way to let their fans know that they don’t think they’re stupid. It will be Jordan Myles (ACH), Boa, Cameron Grimes (Trevor Lee), Isaiah “Swerve” Scott (Shane “Swerve” Strickland), Dexter Lumis (Sam Shaw), Bronson Reed (Jonah Rock), Angel Garza (Humberto Garza), and Joaquin Wilde (DJZ). This is the first time I’ve really wished that NXT was two hours a week instead of one.
Mia Yim gets a hype video set to her entrance music. It’s really well done, and also hits home how dope her entrance music is. I’ve been lukewarm on Yim, but this video worked on me, and I’m into her challenging the women’s champion. Oh yeah, she challenged the women’s champion again in this video.
Xia Li def. Taynara Conti
This is the first time these two have ever squared off in a singles match. I’m surprised they didn’t get the opportunity to work this match out on the NXT house show circuit before having it on TV, given the lack of experience of both women. They both got a chance to show off some interesting offense; strikes in the case of Li, an interesting surfboard in Conti’s case. It wasn’t always pretty, but it was better than I expected and Li (and her roundhouse finisher) looked beastly. **
The Street Profits don’t get a lot of time to bask in their championship glory, because they’re facing the Forgotten Sons next week. It will actually have been about a month since they won the belts, which I think is plenty of basking time.
Adam Cole, Roderick Strong & Bobby Fish def. Velveteen Dream, Matt Riddle & Tyler Breeze
Dream tried a new move here, an Asai Moonsault, and almost knocked out all of Fish’s teeth. Maybe he should stick to the moves he’s good at. The match was a little shorter than I would have liked, but the action was wild and they did a good job keeping the drama up between Breeze and Dream, making Strong look strong, and building the drama for a Cole vs. Riddle rematch somewhere down the line. ***¼
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 Stomping Grounds 2019.
June 23, 2019 – Tacoma, Washington
Drew Gulak def. Tony Nese and Akira Tozawa {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Triple Threat Match}
Putting Nese’s dud of a title reign to bed earlier rather than later was probably a good idea. Gulak and Tozawa got caught in a double pin in a fatal four way match also featuring Humberto Carrillo and Oney Lorcan, getting them both title shots. This was the best match for this title in a long time, and really what this division should be doing all the time: super fast-paced spot fests by guys who can pull them off well. Think of a digest version of either the first ever ROH main event, any number of awesome multi-man Nitro cruiserweight matches, or upper echelon X-Division matches in TNA. Really fun stuff all around. Gulak pinned Tozawa at 11:21 with a Torture Rack neckbreaker to win the title. ****