NXT 526

September 18, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida

They start the show with a Triple H video in which he hypes the brand and introduces the crowd. Smart given that he’s the most famous person associated with the show. 

Mia Yim def. Io Shirai, Candice LeRae, and Bianca Belair {Number One Contender Fatal Four Way Match}
It was bold to put the ladies on first, but I suppose it was reasonable to assume Shirai and LeRae would hold this all together. It was so weird for a commercial to interrupt the middle of this match; I’m just not used to it. I obviously don’t know what we missed, but when they came back from the break it was all home stretch-spotty leading to LeRae pinning Yim with the Asai moonsault in 9:57 (not all of which was shown, of course). Well, it was exciting, I’ll give it that. The Horsewomen come out to intimidate Baszler after the match, but they don’t attack. At the top of the second hour they announce that these two will fight for the title in two weeks. ***¼ 

They’re giving us Keith Lee vs. Dominik Dijakovic part 3 next week, presumably on USA. Then they hype Matt Riddle vs. Killian Dain for those who continue watching this show onto the WWE Network after the second hour is hijacked by the penultimate episode of Suits. 

Cameron Grimes def. Sean Maluta
Are a lot of people in the Carolinas wearing top hats now? Did they ever? Grimes wins in like seven seconds with the Mushroom Stomp. N/A

Roderick Strong def. Velveteen Dream {NXT North American Championship Match}
Strong earned this title shot by losing to Matt Riddle, then pinning Dream in a six-man tag match, then losing (though not getting pinned) in a triple threat match to Dream (also featuring Pete Dunne), and then ultimately setting a couch on fire. Wrestling is weird. This one had two commercial breaks. There were a few moments here when Dream seemed pretty out of it. He got it together for a really hot finish, though Adam Cole hitting a superkick behind the referees back leading to the finish on a show that advertised itself as having no B.S. is a little hinky. Strong got the pin and the title with the End of Heartache in 15:19 shown of 22:30. ***¾ 

After 25 minutes of issues logging into the WWE Network, the second hour of the show starts with the Undisputed Era having fulfilled their prophecy. 

Pete Dunne def. Arturo Ruas
Nigel McGuinness FINALLY takes a shot at how annoying Mauro Ranallo has been on commentary, and Ranallo admits McGuinness has a point. I’m really glad that Ruas got a chance to show off some funky dance fighting here and didn’t just get rolled. It was very similar to Dunne’s match last week, as he mostly dominated but his opponent got to display why people are excited about him. Plus because Ruas is barefoot, Dunne got to screw around with his toes. Dunne won in 6:41 with the finger snap. ***

Dakota Kai will be back next week. 

Xia Li def. Aliyah
Li fell off the top rope, which had to be embarrassing, but she recovered pretty damn quickly. She won in 1:49 with the Tornado Kick. Botch aside, I still hope they start pushing Li a bit. N/A

Denzel Dejournette comes out for a match with Kushida but Imperium surrounds the ring and attacks him before during his entrance. WALTER’s entrance gets a massive pop. Kushida doesn’t like that at all, and he gets the better of the entire group and gets out of dodge while he still can. That was pretty damn dope. 

Lio Rush def. Oney Lorcan {Number One Contender Match}
Rush earned a shot at the WWE Cruiserweight Championship here, so the 205 Live integration is in full swing. Kind of weird that he got this opportunity after not competing since March, and not having been on 205 Live since February. This had a few pacing issues, but the crowd more or less really dug it and when it was all said and done it told the story of Rush coming back from certain defeat really well. He won in 10:48 with a frog splash. ***¼ 

Killian Dain nc. Matt Riddle {Street Fight}
Not much of a match happened here. After a few minutes of brawling around the building, Riddle was attacked by Imperium, which drew in the Street Profits, which drew in the Forgotten Sons, which pretty much drew in the rest of the roster. Riddle and Dain made their way back to the ring while everyone else brawled on the floor, which led security to inexplicably break up the fight in the ring… during a street fight. Anyway, the show fades out with everyone still brawling. N/A

Network streaming issues aside, I think we can more or less safely say that two hours has opened up the show for some air to flow through, making the whole thing breezier and allowing more people to be featured in a more interesting way. The infusion of NXT UK and 205 Live talent was well-executed too. Hopefully the Network crash meant a ton of people were watching and Vince McMahon will feel good enough about how this show is going to let it keep playing out the way it did tonight. They advertised a no B.S. show, and while there was a little bit of B.S. (a ref bump and interference at the end of the title match and the non-finish in the main event) I feel confident that the show isn’t ruined forever the way people feared.