October 23, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida
Rhea Ripley def. Bianca Belair
Again, I’m not sure if the picture-in-picture is going to air on the replays of this episode, but holy crap did Belair control a lot of this match when you watch it with the commercial segment. Then Ripley came back when they went back to full screen and Belair sold for her like a champ. Io Shirai predictably interfered to attack Ripley, but Ripley fought through it (while Candice LeRae neutralized Shirai) and hit the Riptide for the win at 12:37. The match was a good time, and it was nice to see the ladies get over ten minutes in the opener of the show. I like the build to Ripley’s eventual title match a lot, and if she’s not the one to take the title from Shayna Baszler then they’re insane. ***¼
Tyler Bate and Pete Dunne are interviewed while walking to the building. Bate tries to make excuses for Dunne’s loss, but Dunne respects Damien Priest’s sleazy tactics. Dunne also says he doesn’t care about Killian Dain, and Bate laughing at Dunne’s mood in the background is about the greatest thing ever. Bate then sits at ringside for Matt Riddle’s match and fist bumps him on his way to the ring.
Matt Riddle def. Cameron Grimes
If this had ended in under ten seconds I would have been pissed, though that they played into both guys being prone to win quickly was neat. What I really like about this match is that it establishes that there are tiers in NXT. Grimes had previously only lost to Jordan Myles in the finals of the Breakout Tournament, though all of his subsequent wins had come against similarly lower-card guys. So it works for him to make Riddle work for it but ultimately come up short by a wide margin. Riddle won with the Bro Derek at 6:53 (shown of 11:25). This was a blast; it drove the crowd absolutely insane, and Riddle countering the Mushroom Stomp to a powerbomb was a thing of beauty. Grimes shoves Bate after the match, so Bate bops him in the face. This was a total delight all around. ***½
Tyler Breeze, Fandango & Isaiah Scott def. Jaxson Ryker, Wesley Blake & Steve Cutler
Scott is replacing the injured Kushida, who would have been returning the favor to help Breezango against the Forgotten Sons after they helped him fight Imperium. The Forgotten Sons have quietly gotten very good at doing all the heel tag team tropes really well. Blake & Cutler are still missing compelling personalities, and they lean a little too hard on the rabid Ryker to carry that load. This match turned into a hell of a fun romp. Scott got to show off some of his flippy dippy whimsey and Breezango were great backup for him. He pinned Blake in 9:17 (shown of 13:16) with a roundhouse kick. Scott is all the way over now. ***½
Killian Dain wraps his fingers by a trash fire and says he’ll break Dunne.
Angel Garza def. Jack Gallagher
Lio Rush sits in on commentary for this match. This was a fun sprint, and while it was weird to see Gallagher come in to put Garza over in short order, he did a nice job on his way to his back. He got to show off his strength enough that it felt like a match that Garza happened to be able to put away quickly rather than a squash.. Garza won in 4:03 with an Asai Moonsault. Garza motions to Rush after the match that he wants the Cruiserweight Championship. **¾
Tegan Nox & Dakota Kai def. Jessamyn Duke & Marina Shaffir {Number One Contenders Match}
I like that this happened for a number of reasons, chief among them being that the last time the WWE Women’s Tag Team Titles made an appearance in NXT it was when Sasha Banks & Bayley were the champs and the Sky Pirates seemed to be the logical challengers. Sadly, Vince McMahon forgot that those titles existed for like six months, but now it has come almost full circle as one half of the Sky Pirates is one of the current champs. On the other hand, the Horsewomen have no place in this match as they’re 0-3-1 in NXT, they’re not over at all, and we’re almost a year since they’re TV debut and they still can’t really hang. Luckily, Nox basically rolled them and put Duke down with the Shiniest Wizard at 3:21. The Kabuki Warriors show up on the big screen after the match to laugh at Team Kick and tell them they have no chance. *¾
They announce Bate vs. Grimes and LeRae vs. Shirai for next week.
Roderick Strong def. Dominik Dijakovic and Keith Lee {NXT North American Championship Triple Threat Match}
I had to leave halfway through the live broadcast of this episode to go see Jojo Rabbit (an excellent movie), and watched the second hour on demand on the USA app. In doing so, I learned that the picture-in-picture commercial segments are indeed cut out when you don’t watch live, which you can spot because of the way they transition to commercial. I can’t imagine I missed much that was interesting. Anyway, I kind of loved this match. They went with the story they should have, which was Lee and Dijakovic working as though they were Kaiju, swatting away the irritating humans represented by Strong. Well, humans with hydrogen bombs, as Strong was able to make a gnarly dent on both giants. After a really breathtaking match, Strong won the thing at 12:23 (shown) by sneaking in after Lee hit a superbomb on Dijak by hitting the Bakatare Sliding Kick on Lee. ****
The Undisputed Era beats up Lee & Dijakovic after the match. The crowd chants for Finn Balor (who I felt was advertised as wrestling on this episode), but Tommaso Ciampa comes out. He faces down the Era by himself, but Johnny Gargano comes out to get his back. Then, Balor does the same… only to turn on Gargano. Wow, I did not see that coming and I am so glad I avoided spoilers until watching this. Ciampa gets destroyed by the Era while Balor beats up Gargano on the floor.