NXT 519

August 7, 2019 – Winter Park Florida

William Regal starts the show by bringing the Undisputed Era and the Street Profits to the ring for a contract signing. Montez Ford drops an O’Reilly Auto Parts reference, cementing his legendary status. The crowd picks up on it for a second too. They throw a few digs at one another, which is nice because there’s been pretty much zero build to this match otherwise.

They show a video package for the North American title match at Takeover that does a nice job hiding how backwards this angle has been and also hides Dunne and Strong’s questionable mic skills. I’ll just watch this a bunch to get me into the match. 

Then we get a video for the Women’s Championship match. It’s very clear they don’t have much new content taped for this episode. This story turned interesting because Shayna Baszler is selling it really well in promos, which is good because Yim mostly comes off as a try-hard. 

Shane Thorne def. Joaquin Wilde
Thorne is bitter about the Breakout Tournament even existing. I dig that, and want the angle to expand to include more guys (Keith Lee and others who’ve complained about not making enough of a mark yet on Thorne’s side, other tournament guys on Wilde’s) and lead to the WarGames match. This match was solid, with Wilde controlling with his innovative offense until Thorne lost his cool and abused Wilde on the outside enough to put him down. **¾ 

Io Shirai and Candice LeRae’s hype video is solid, which isn’t surprising because it’s chronicling the only truly compelling storyline heading into the PPV. 

Matt Riddle comes out for the main event but Killian Dain attacks him during his entrance. He hits a cannonball against the steps and Riddle is loopy. 

Next we take a look back at the Breakout Tournament. Jordan Myles and Cameron Grimes will fight in the finals next week on NXT TV. Also next week, Fandango & Tyler Breeze will face the the Forgotten Sons next week. They may also show up post-makeover. It’s weird that the pre-show in Toronto will have better-built matches than the main card. 

Things wrap up with a look at the main event in Toronto. William Regal won’t be saying what the final fall stipulation will be until and unless there’s a need for it.

On the one hand, this show was exactly what was needed right now; because it feels kind of like NXT took the summer off creatively, these video packages reframed weeks of lethargic storylines into what look like compelling issues. On the other hand, (and this is overlooking that original content on this episode consisted of one match and a bait & switch) I watched weeks of this show that weren’t particularly compelling, so I feel like it’s a bit of a cheat. A lot of people only watch Takeover, so for them this is a big win. I guess that’s what will matter in the end. 

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 are the title defenses from SummerSlam 2019 and 205 Live two days later.

August 11, 2019 – Toronto, Ontario

Drew Gulak def. Oney Lorcan {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Match}
Lorcan beat  Akira Tozawa, Ariya Daivari, Gentleman Jack Gallagher, Kalisto, and Tony Nese in a Six Pack Challenge to earn this title shot. I don’t want to say that these guys took it feasy here, but I wasn’t seeing much sweat until the final minute. That final minute saw some stiff shots thrown, but all told I was pretty underwhelmed by this. Gulak won in 8:48 with the Cyclone Crash. **¾

August 13, 2019 – Toronto, Ontario

Drew Gulak def. Oney Lorcan {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Match}
Lorcan got this rematch because Gulak punched him in the throat before finishing him at SummerSlam, but getting punched in the throat has never been against the rules so that’s a stupid and lazy storyline. This was more like it. They got more time to develop a better story, played off of the action in their mediocre SummerSlam match, and drew the crowd into a hard-hitting battle. It’s a shame that the 205 rematches are so much better than the PPV matches, because the audiences are so much bigger for the PPVs. Gulak won in 15:29 when Lorcan passed out while in the GuLock. ***½