NXT 529

October 9, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida

Lio Rush def. Drew Gulak {NXT Cruiserweight Championship Match}
I hope they add some NXT branding to the title belt now that they’ve changed the title’s name. Last week, Rush asked Twitter what his springboard stunner should be called and Mauro Ranallo suggested the Come Up. Nobody else suggested this, but now Mauro is calling it that on commentary anyway. This had some good back-and-forth action, though it was lacking in a story that made me invested in Rush succeeding where others have failed in defeating Gulak. He won in 8:09 (shown) with the Final Hour. NXT General Manager Wiliam Regal presents Rush with the title but Gulak insists that he be the one to give the belt to Rush. ***¼ 

Rhea Ripley def. Aliyah
This squash was an appropriate use of Aliyah. Ripley won in 20 seconds with an inverted Cloverleaf hold. After the match she lets Shayna Bazsler know that she’s not done with her. N/A

Steve Cutler & Wesley Blake def. Tyler Breeze & Fandango
Breezango was supposed to fight Ever-Rise here, but the Forgotten Sons beat up those guys before the match and took their place. I don’t think that little bit, changing a match that wasn’t even promoted in the first place, does anything for the Sons. This was a decent enough sprint that ended at 3:36 when Fandango fell to the Memory Remains. **¼ 

Keith Lee and Dominik Dijakovic are going at it one more time last week to break the tie. Will something happen to add a little freshness to this long-running feud? I hope so. 

Cameron Grimes def. Boa
Grimes won the match in 6 seconds with the Mushroom Stomp. Killian Dain comes out after the match to attack Boa. Nigel McGuinness says that Grimes should give an assist to Dain, but Dain didn’t do anything until the match was over. Why should we care that Dain is beating up a guy who got pinned in 6 seconds? N/A

Damian Priest attacked Pete Dunne because Dunne has already made a name for himself in NXT, so he’ll do the same at Dunne’s expense. I kind of like how NXT has moved away from backstage segments in favor of more produced promos in character-appropriate settings. Later, Dunne says he understands why Priest attacked him, but he’s not going to let Priest gain fame at his expense. They’ll fight next week. 

Roderick Strong def. Isaiah Scott
I really like the way newer guys have gotten a chance to shine every week since the move to two hours, even if they end up losing their matches. Ranallo called the Sick Kick the Busaiku Knee Kick, so he’s dead to me. Strong won after an Undisputed Era distraction have him the advantage and he tapped Scott to the Stronghold at 8:26 (shown). This was really fast-paced; a fun time at the matches. ***¼ 

Velveteen Dream interrupts an Undisputed Era promo after the match and plasters the nude title belt photo that Strong posted to Instagram up on the big screen. Then he digitally removes the title belt to make it look like Strong isn’t well endowed. Cute. They’ll fight for the title in two weeks. Tommaso Ciampa comes out with a crutch and a chair and the Undisputed Era bails. Ciampa gets “daddy’s home” over as a new catchphrase. Later, Angel Garza gets in Ciampa’s face backstage and says something (presumably) insulting to him. Ciampa lays him out but when asked he says he has no idea what Garza was saying. The crowd liked that. They’ll fight next week. 

Bianca Belair def. Dakota Kai
Earlier in the show they hyped Tegan Nox’s return and her new alliance with Dakota Kai. I’d noticed that in her match in NXT UK, Nox was wearing a Team Kick armband, which was a cute and subtle way to show that she’s aligned with the Captain of Team Kick, Kai. there were a lot of little, great details in this match, like Belair having to learn to take Kai seriously after getting rolled for a large chunk of the match. I’m frankly pretty surprised they jobbed Kai so soon after her return, but it sure made Belair’s win seem like a bigger deal. She hit the KOD at 6:45 (shown) for the win. After the match she tells Ripley that if she wants to get to Baszler she has to go through her. ***

WALTER def. Kushida
Ignoring Kushida’s stint in EVOLVE, both guys were undefeated going into this. This was pretty incredible. It featured a recovery from a botched dive that was so good that they showed a replay of it. I’ve never seen that before. It set an awesome tone for the rest of the match, as before that Kushida was being very daring and after that he wrestled as if he knew he couldn’t afford to make any mistakes. And of course, after getting as close as anyone to tapping the big man, Kushida tries for the Hoverboard one too many times and falls to a lariat at 13:19 (shown). ****