November 1, 2019 – Buffalo, New York
At Crown Jewel, it was announced that NXT would be participating in the Survivor Series this year. Then, most of the roster wasn’t able to get out of Saudi Arabia and arrive in Buffalo in time to be on Smackdown, which gave NXT a great opportunity to invade the show and build to the PPV. But first…
Brock Lesnar and Paul Heyman come out to build a Rey Mysterio vs. Lesnar program. Then they show the entire Lesnar vs. Cain Velasquez match from the PPV the night before. It was only two minutes long so what did they have to lose? Lesnar quits Smackdown so that he can fight Mysterio on Raw. On his way out, Triple H and Shawn Michaels cast a glance his way, which leads to what I’m actually interested in. But first…
Bayley def. Nikki Cross {WWE Smackdown Women’s Championship Match}
Both of these ladies came from NXT, so why not? Aiden English and Renee Young accidentally have a profound conversation on commentary over why English feels entitled to Bayley’s smiles. They could build an important storyline around what it means for men to insist that women smile at them… if this wasn’t WWE. Anyway, this match was alright, but it never felt like Cross was going to win and they kept it rather basic. They did an alright job of keeping Cross looking Strong, though that necessitated a cheap finish with Sasha Banks interference leading to Bayley hitting a facebuster at 6:02 (shown of 8:53) for the win. **¾
And now things finally get interesting as Shayna Baszler runs in from the crowd and attacks everyone to a big ovation. Later, Aiden English gets pulled off of commentary in favor of Pat Mcafee. I wonder what happened there. Then, Sami Zayn tells NXT to stay out of his way. Matt Riddle & Keith Lee get in his way and he runs off. Riddle chasing Zayn in flip flops was kind of funny. They end up in the ring and Zayn gets wrecked. This was cute as a novelty but not particularly compelling on its face.
The Miz comes out to interview himself because his intended guest Bray Wyatt is stuck in the Middle East, but Tommaso Ciampa comes out to take the Fiend’s place. The two of them have a pretty decent back and forth on the mic that transitions into a match.
Tommaso Ciampa def. The Miz
By Ciampa’s standards this was rather low-impact, but he might still be trying to get his sea legs back. He was also in there with the Miz so the match had a ceiling. After some solid back-and-forth, Ciampa caught Miz coming off the top with a knee and hit the Fairytale Ending at 7:40 for the win. I would have lost my mind had Ciampa lost. ***
Daniel Bryan approaches Triple H & Michaels in the back. Triple H says they’re there because Survivor Series is coming up and NXT is answering the call to battle. Bryan challenges him to a match, but Triple H offers up Adam Cole instead. The crowd eats it up. Bryan wants the title on the line. Cole is all for it. For all the pearl clutching about Cole getting buried if and when he moves over to Raw or Smackdown because he’s too small, he certainly looked taller than Bryan here.
Rhea Ripley & Bianca Belair def. Mandy Rose & Sonya Deville
Belair had beaten up Carmella & Dana Brooke before the match and the Brits took their spot here. This was super squishy. Nox through Deville at the commentators and busted Young’s nose. Ripley made Rose tap to her elevated cloverleaf in 1:21. N/A
Adam Cole def. Daniel Bryan {NXT Championship Match}
Stephanie McMahon comes out before the main event to brag about WWE achievements in women’s wrestling. The timing of that was weird and it didn’t lead to anything new, which was also weird. Anyway, Triple H & Michaels are at ringside for this match. Cole brings out Roderick Strong for some facetime on the ramp. Dude looks like a goddamn star out there. It is just surreal that this match is happening in the main event of a show on network television. This was good all the way through, but it really started picking up after the second commercial break. That’s in no small part to Triple H standing up nervous every time Bryan looked like he might win the match. And even though it seemed very unlikely, there were many moments where it looked like Bryan would win, which is what the opening match was missing. Cole actually took it on the chin for a lot of this match, which is fine as Bryan is an established WrestleMania main eventer and Cole was winning in the end anyway. Speaking of which, he won in 15:08 (shown of 20:51) with a superkick, the Panama Sunrise, and the Last Shot. ****
After the match, Triple H brings about a score of NXT wrestlers to the ring and dares Raw and Smackdown to hit them back. I appreciate that they kept Ciampa and Cole on opposite sides of the ring (though didn’t really do the same for Ripley and Baszler), though it bugs me that because Survivor Series rolls around we’re meant to forget that these people are so mad at each other they have to get it out of their systems in WarJames the night before the main roster PPV. Ah well, at least it was something fresh for the Friday show. As for the brand warfare storyline itself, WWE lucked into a good start to the angle here, as NXT taking a shot while the rest of the roster is away (or quitting like Lesnar) is a dope move.
Things continued a few days later on Raw.
November 4, 2019 – Uniondale, New York
There wasn’t nearly as much NXT content on this episode of wrestle fighting, so I’m just skipping to the relevant stuff.
Seth Rollins comes out to cut a pouty promo about losing the title and Brock Lesnar returning to Raw as a champion, thus negating a year’s worth of Rollins’ work. He doesn’t know what to do next. Triple H comes out to remind Rollins how he’s shaped his career, ever since he was the first NXT Champion. He wants Rollins to return to NXT. The Undisputed Era comes through the crowd to confront Rollins. The OC, who were never in NXT, start to walk to the ring and the Era bails. Then Damien Priest and (sigh) Dominic Dijakovic come out and beat up the OC. Random Raw jobbers make the save. This was pretty clumsy, scattered, and uninteresting. Then in the back, Rollins demands that Triple H give him a title shot against Adam Cole so he can come to NXT as the top guy. Why not cut out all the other crap and just say that in the ring? That’s a perfectly logical storyline and you wouldn’t need to have Dijak nonsensically helping the Undisputed Era.
Becky Lynch is interviewed about the triple threat match amongst the three Women’s Champions at Survivor Series. She defeated both of her opponents’ best friends, so she thinks she’s a target now. Shayna Baszler sits down in the interviewers chair to let Lynch know that she isn’t Rhonda Rousey. Both of them make Bayley and afterthought and make it clear that the real match is between the two of them. This wasn’t the worst.
Seth Rollins def. Adam Cole {NXT Championship Match}
Rollins won in 8:59 (shown) by disqualification when Triple H signalled to the Undisputed Era to interfere. That drew out some of the Raw roster to defend Rollins, which brought out the NXT roster, who had presumably been hanging out in the black cars that Triple H arrived in. From a storyline standpoint, this was cute; NXT invaded Smackdown when the roster was stuck in Saudi Arabia, and then tonight Triple H manipulated their dejected former champion into a trap via some interesting bait. From a match-quality standpoint it wasn’t much. The crowd is super out on Rollins and weren’t interested in the possibility of him becoming champion, and Cole wasn’t allowed to really be Cole here because it was all just leading to the non-finish anyway. Ah well, at least it wasn’t a bore. The show-ending brawl ended with Keith Lee diving onto everyone. **¾