July 17, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida
Matt Riddle def. Arturo Ruas
I wonder if this was taped in anticipation of people watching the EVOLVE show on the Network, since both guys were on that show. Given that the commentators don’t mention it, I’d guess not. Ruas’s entrance music sounds great without EVOLVE’s crappy audio. This was fun while it lasted (which wasn’t nearly long enough) as they went with a faux MMA bout. Riddle won with the Final Flash and punches until Ruas stopped defending himself. Ruas is ready for TV, and I wish they’d let him be on it more consistently. After the match, Killian Dain attacks Riddle. The beatdown lasts a little too long and loses the crowd, but then Dain sentons Riddle through a very obviously gimmicks plank on the ramp. The match worked for me, the aftermath didn’t. **¾
The Street Profits take a break from screaming on Raw to speak quietly on NXT TV. They’re not sweating Kyle O’Reilly & Bobby Fish. Angelo Dawkins rips the Undisputed Era catchphrase, and Montez Ford’s reaction makes me want to kiss them. Meanwhile, Mia Yim straight up assaulted Marina Shafir in a parking lot. Isn’t Yim a babyface? What the hell was that?
Bronson Reed def. Dexter Lumis {Quarterfinal Match}
Lumis has a Halloween-meets-Stranger Things entrance song and a serial killer first name, but he has no heat. I’m watching this in the dark during a thunderstorm and he still doesn’t come off as creepy as much as he does cartoony. The front row fans have changed their clothes again. I wonder if I’m alone in being irritated when matches from different tapings are used in one episode. Lumis’s rest holds lose the crowd, though Reed does his best to keep them engaged with his big boy big moves. Reed won with a massive, beautiful Superfly Splash, and thank god he won because I don’t think Lumis has the goods. **½
Tyler Breeze realizes now that if he wants to adapt to NXT as it is now, he’s going to need some backup as everyone seems to be a part of a crew. The Forgotten Sons approach him and rip him up. He compares beards with them and misidentifies Jaxson Ryker as Buddy Murphy. Breeze is effortlessly charismatic. Later, Keith Lee again admits that he’s had a stuttering career in NXT so far. He also speaks a bit bitterly about the opportunities others have had who came in with and after him. He calls out Damien Priest in particular and says he’ll use the new guy to change the narrative. They’ll fight next week, and so will Ryker and Breeze, presumably.
Kushida def. Apollo Crews
Crews is very over with this crowd, and with Nigel McGuinness who works “too easy” into the commentary. This was really fun, and the kind of match I want to be seeing out of Kushida much more than squashes. Crews was really generous with him, which at the same time getting to look more impressive than he ever gets to look on the main roster (case is point, getting beat up by Almas for five minutes before getting a fluke win the night before this aired). And because Crews got to look great here, Kushida looks even better for being able to tap him out with a wild armbar that he grabbed off the top turnbuckle. ***¼
Adam Cole comes out to defend his title against Tuan Tucker, Johnny Gargano’s student who has been featured in recent weeks when both Gargano and Cole visited his wrestling school. Tucker declines, instead calling out Gargano who runs to the ring and beats up Cole. Once again, the EVOLVE show and Gargano’s interference in Cole’s match isn’t referenced. That’s not surprising since this was taped first, but man it would have shown great continuity and planning had they mentioned the EVOLVE show here. Mauro Ranallo tries to sell Gargano’s absence as the former champ being at peace with losing the title until Cole went to Cleveland and ran down his students. I buy that, and I quite enjoyed this show-ending brawl around the building (and Gargano’s off-mic challenge for a rubber match).