EVOLVE 134

August 25, 2019 – Chicago, Illinois

Anthony Henry def. Arturo Ruas {No Holds Barred Match}
Before the match, Ruas interrupted Anthony Gutierrez’s victory celebration, I guess to tease a feud between the two of them after this? It wasn’t executed well. Fortunately, the match was better than the pre-match stuff. They did a long brawl around the building that was more fun than your typical punch-and-walk affair, highlighted by Ruas hitting Henry with an exploder over the guardrail. Once they got back into the ring they exchanged some really sharp-looking strikes, and then Henry was finally able to get a win over Ruas with a tight roll up. This was about as good as their first match against each other, and a nice capper to this feud. Ruas shows Henry respect after the match, which is part of Henry’s ongoing “I beat them so they better honor me,” gimmick. ***½  

AR Fox & Leon Ruff def. Matt Riddle & Curt Stallion {EVOLVE Tag Team Championship Match}
Lenny Leonard irritatingly on commentary wonders what will happen to the tag titles if Riddle wins, since he’s signed to NXT, ignoring completely that the Street Profits were the EVOLVE tag champs for quite a while. Fox his a 450 Splash on Stallion to retain the belts. The match was a heck of a little bop, though it did have its share of contrived indy nonsense in it when Fox and Ruff made their comeback. There was also no sign of Stallion’s new hard edge from the night before. ***

Austin Theory def. JD Drake and Josh Briggs {EVOLVE Championship Triple Threat Match}
Henry tried to make this match a four-way on the strength of his wins earlier tonight and the night before, but Theory refused on account of only taking orders from NXT General Manager William Regal. This had a weird mix of two-up-one-down and over-choreographed stretches. I’d go as far as saying it almost came together as something good, and never quite looked ridiculous. But there wasn’t a strong throughline or story; after the first couple of minutes it just became spot, spot, spot, rest, repeat. The crowd got super hot when they thought Drake was going to win the title near the end, but then Henry ran in and turned on his partner. A chair-assisted kick to the face from Henry to Drake was enough to give Theory the win at 14:09. I dug the finish, as it had all the narrative juice the match was missing. ***

Drew Gulak def. Kushida {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Match}
This wasn’t quite the master work that their submission match was, but both guys worked here as though they were wrestling on WWE TV rather than slumming it at a house show. The match even included a really tense pinning sequence that had me believing that Kushida might win the title on this show. That’s quite a feat. Gulak won with a roll up with his feet on the ropes, which is a pretty cheap way to end a main event and was a big reason I was left feeling less satisfied here than when they fought in Maryland. I have a feeling this will never be mentioned on TV since Kushida is still undefeated in NXT. ***¾ 

This was a rough night for the NXT roster, as every one of them lost. I wonder if it’s ever been the case that multiple WWE guys on a laid down for indy wrestlers on an indy show before.