September 25, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida
The intro this week is a hybrid of Triple H motivational speaking and the previous intro. Then the Undisputed Era walk out to the balcony with all of their title belts. But before that can amount to anything, they shoot to the opening match.
Keith Lee def. Dominik Dijakovic
This rivalry doesn’t do it for me the way that it does for others. I recently watched their famed PWG match and found it to be a mess, and their previous two NXT matches had awe-inspiring action, but were really slow, kind of disjointed, and really paled in comparison to great monster mash matches you can find from the likes of the Steiner Brothers, Vader, Stan Hansen, and more. I’ll give this match something the others didn’t have, the finisher here was pretty compelling, as Lee gutted up from certain defeat to lift Dijakovic from underneath to hit the Supernova at 9:15 (shown). The rest of the match was a choppier than their previous two, so I’m going to split the difference again. Now that they’re 1-1-1 in NXT, it seems like these two are being set up to either team up or go at it one more time at Takoever. ***
After last week’s show-ending brawl, NXT General Manager William Regal demanded that the Killian Dain vs. Matt Riddle Street Fight happen again. He incentivizes them to finish the match by putting an NXT Championship title shot on the line. Then the Street Profits talk about getting a tag title shot next week.
Dakota Kai def. Taynara
This is Kai’s first match in nine months. She won this thing with her new finisher, the Go2Kick, in 2:42. It wasn’t really a squash, as Taynara got to show off a lot of offense, but it also wasn’t particularly compelling as Kai looked a little nervous and Taynara still needs some polish. *
Matt Riddle def. Killian Dain {Number One Contender Street Fight}
This had the kind of pace I’ve been hoping for out of every Lee vs. Dijakovic match. Dain is a big boy doing big boy things and Riddle is a strong boy who is game to toss him around. This also had the benefit of a few remarkable set pieces, like a break-away wall and tables. Riddle won with a Fujiwara armbar at 12:59 (shown). A few awkward moments aside, I liked this about as much as their last real match. Adam Cole comes out after the match to trash talk but ends up getting caught in an armbar and tapping out. The Undisputed Era makes the save. ***½
The USA hour ends with heavy hype for the Takeover-esque episode next week, featuring three title matches and limited commercials.
Rhea Ripley def. Kayden Carter
Lacey Lane gets rebranded as Carter here, but in name only it seems. She’s much smoother around the edges than she’d been in past appearances, so that was nice because she actually controlled much of the match before Ripley caught her with the Rip Cord at 2:37. **
They show a brief video hyping Johnny Gargano, and I wonder why his very promising issue with Shane Thorne has been kept off the first two episodes of this show.
Danny Burch & Oney Lorcan def. Matt Martel & Jeff Parker
Martel & Parker are called Ever-Rise now. Sounds like a porn thing. This match was solid. Burch & Lorcan got to look pretty dominant, and their home-stretch Hulk-up was really well received by the crowd. Ever-Rise needs to show off a little more tandem offense if they’re going to get over with this crowd. Burch & Lorcan won in 6:25 when they hit Parker with the elevated DDT. **½
Chelsea Green & Deonna Purrazzo are hanging out in the crowd. This tandem was sort of spoiled by t-shirts that went on sale recently for both women that looked very similar. Seems they’ll be heels.
Cameron Grimes def. Raul Mendoza
This started really strong, with Grimes looking to finish the match in seconds the way he did the week before, but Mendoza being ready for him. Mendoza is really good, has been really good for a while, and I can’t wrap my head around why he’s not featured more prominently. Grimes also looked good here, as good as he’s looked in NXT to date. Grimes won with the Mushroom Stomp out of nowhere at 7:27. The crowd hated the finish, which is amazing because it means that Mendoza is over by virtue of his hard work and also gets across how dangerous Grimes’ finisher is. ***¼
Kushida, Fandango & Tyler Breeze def. Alexander Wolfe, Marcel Barthel & Fabian Aichner
Breezango got a hell of a reaction as Kushida’s partners, even if guys like Akira Tozawa, Jack Gallagher, or Mustache Mountain would have made more sense. The commentators sell choosing the goofy Breezango as a direct shot at Imperium’s serious mission, which I can appreciate. This was a blast. Imperium looked fantastic as a team, keeping Breeze isolated for much of the match in a variety of clever ways. Then Fandango and Kushida got to come in and clean house down the stretch and wow the crowd. Kushida pinned Barthel at 11:09 with a bridging O’Connor Roll. Kushida celebrated after the match until WALTER assaulted him on the ramp. ***½
I just have to take one moment to complain about Mauro Ranallo’s commentary here. In an effort to sound up on pop culture, he’ll randomly make connections to box office draws internet memes that have absolutely nothing to do with what’s happening in the ring. It totally dumbfounds his broadcast partners and brings the story being told on commentary to a halt. He must be stopped.