September 11, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida
Rhea Ripley arrives at the building with a driver in an SUV. That doesn’t really seem in line with what we’ve seen of her character for the last year.
Damian Priest def. Boa
Beth Phoenix tried to sell Boa as a big man that would be difficult for Priest, but he’s the smaller man in this match. Boa has cupping bruises on his lower back. That’s not apropos of anything in the match it just makes me respect him less. I’m probably being culturally insensitive, at least it’s native to his home country. Anyway, Priest takes this one in 2:34 with the Reckoning. Boa pretty much got squashed. N/A
Velveteen Dream responds to Roderick Strong’s arson last week by saying that if the Dream burns, Strong will burn with him. This is the perfect match to headline the first NXT on USA. They say this will headline the first hour (which is the only hour that will be on cable for the first two weeks) and Matt Riddle vs. Killian Dain will be the hour-2 main event on the WWE Network.
Johnny Garagno comes out for an announcement. The crowd seems to assume he’s leaving NXT, so he gets a loud and long ovation. He’s floored by the support he’s received from the fans and he loves everything about NXT. Before he can say what he’s decided to do with his career, Shane Throne interrupts. Thorne more or less calls Gargano an attention whore who could have just tweeted whatever he wanted to say about his career. NXT will be just fine without him. Gargano says he’s not going anywhere and superkicks Thorne. He signs that he’s NXT for life. I found this very effective, and I’m glad Thorne is finally getting something significant to do.
Pete Dunne def. Angel Garza
It was looking like Dunne was going to roll over Garza here and I was very happy to see that it didn’t end up being the case. Dunne did come out looking much more dominant, but Garza got to show off a decent amount of his graceful stuff. Dunne won in 8:01 when he avoided a moonsault, grabbed and armbar, and snapped Garza’s fingers. ***
The Street Profits hang out in Central Park and say they’re coming to get their tag titles back. I’ve been living in New York City for too long because I know exactly which rock they’re standing on.
Cameron Grimes def. Raul Mendoza
Nigel McGuinness calls a near-fall by Mendoza early on a potential upset, telegraphing who was going to win here as Grimes doesn’t exactly have a ton of wins under his belt in NXT. The truth is that Mendoza is probably more than a few notches better than Grimes in the ring (he’s becoming the king of the three-minute match), and it’s a shame that exciting jobs is all they let him do. Grimes gave up a ton here, but hit the kick stomp out of nowhere for the win at 3:50. **¾
Candice LeRae wants to know why NXT General Manager William Regal rewards Io Shirai with spots in contender matches when she attacks people from behind. Regal doesn’t have a good answer (the answer is because Shirai wins matches, just say that), but he puts LeRae in next week’s contender’s match and says that if Ripley wins tonight she’ll find herself in that match too. And it looks like Dakota Kai is coming back.
Shayna Baszler def. Rhea Ripley
Ripley would have been a great candidate to come in and obliterate Baszler, so I can’t really understand why they just put her in the mix with everyone else like this. This was fun and aggressive and ended when Ripley got frustrated with the Horsewomen interfering and hit Baszler with a chair, getting disqualified at 5:25. At least they didn’t let her get pinned on her first go around. The Horsewomen back off rather than try to attack Ripley. **½
The Undisputed Era close the show by hyping Strong’s match on USA. “I hated that couch,” Roderick Strong is a national treasure.
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 is the title defense from Clash of Champions 2019.
September 15, 2019 – Charlotte, North Carolina
Drew Gulak def. Lince Dorado and Humberto Carrillo {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Triple Threat Match}
This was a lot of fun, and I imagine better than any singles match would have been given the time. Gulak being frustrrated with the high flying antics of his opponents, only to use them against them when he stole Carrillo’s pin and rolled up Dorado was terrific. I could have stood to watch more from this feud, but it was not to be. Gulak won at 9:53 with a roll up. ***½