November 6, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida
Because of what happened on Raw, the show opens with the OC attacking the Undisputed Era outside the arena. Then they come to the ring for the first time in NXT history. See, everyone has to go through NXT. Tommaso Ciampa responds and gets a massive ovation for calling NXT the main roster. He doesn’t care that the OC took out the Undisputed Era because those are his opponents at Takeover, but he won’t let them just walk into Full Sail like it’s nothing. His transition to a babyface is going so much better than I would have expected. Keith Lee and Matt Riddle back him up and we have a main event. They got all that done in eight minutes; this show is so efficient.
Pete Dunne def. Damien Priest
I’m glad I watched this one live, because during the first commercial break (the second break didn’t have picture-in-picture) there was actually some fun stuff on the apron, like Dunne creatively attacking the hand and Priest using the tag rope to stop Dunne from getting too much offense. This was a terrific follow up to their first match, with strong action throughout and a beautiful finish. Dunne grabbed Priest’s hand during the archer taunt, then with the referee distracted Dunne blocked a low blow and hit one of his own before snapping the fingers for the win at 11:54 (shown of 15:11). I thought about rating this on the merits of what everyone would see in the replay of this episode, but screw it, it’s not my fault that y’all watched Dynamite live instead of this show. The bit during the first commercial break puts it over the top for me. Killian Dain attacks Dunne after the match. Priest joins in on the beating but Dain wants Dunne for himself. The scene ends with Dain walking out while Dunne and Priest are left on their backs. ****
The women’s WarJanes match has been mostly filled out. Rhea Ripley announced that Tegan Nox and Candice LeRae are her team, and left the fourth spot empty for now. Shayna Baszler thus only announced two teammates for her side in Io Shirai and Bianca Belair. Baszler said the reason Ripley didn’t announce Dakota Kai as the fourth is because Kai would be a waste of a pick, so Kai and Baszler will square off tonight.
Taynara def. Santana Garrett
Eagle-eyed viewers will see Robert Strauss in the crowd during Taynara’s entrance, but he’s not seen again during the match. Good to see Garrett back. Once again, focusing on the Judo provides good results for Taynara, as she looks confident doing it and the match moves smoothly because of that. Taynara wins with a gnarly pump kick at 4:07. Yeah, not bad. **½
Tony Nese wants a Cruiserweight Championship match. Shayna Baszler preps for her match against Kai. Angel Garza gets a little spotlight. NXT will be represented in a tag team champions three way and a women champions three way at Survivor Series.
Shayna Baszler def. Dakota Kai
Two years ago, Kai was so afraid of Shayna that she crumbled when they fought for the first time. A year ago, these two main evented an episode of NXT TV and Kai stood up to Baszler, getting a few good near-falls, but ultimately lost. This time around, Kai didn’t balk at all. She fought hard but went down to the Kirafuda Clutch at 7:53 (shown of 11:15). This was more interesting and competitive than their match last year, but still somewhat one-sided. After the match, the Horsewomen keep attacking Kai. The WarJanes teams come out and brawl until Mia Yim clears house on the heels with a kendo stick. So that’s four for the heroes… maybe Kai turns heel and joins Shayna? ***½
Ciampa isn’t saying yet who the fourth man on his WarJames team is because he’s focused on fighting the OC tonight. Isaiah Scott gets a little spotlight.
Tony Nese def. Angel Garza {Number One Contender Match}
205 Live was taped before this show started, so this is a bit anachronistic for the live crowd. Presumably, Garza had to lose two pounds to participate in this match as he was announced at 207 a couple weeks ago. There were some fantastic spots centered around Garza’s tear-away pants, which is good because each one brought back the fans when they were starting to drift. The final few minutes of this match were batshit crazy; Garza is really gifted in the ring. Garza won in 9:01 (shown of 12:19) with the Wing Clipper. Lio Rush comes out after the match to size up the competition, but Garza slaps him. Rush takes it in stride. They’ll fight next week. ***¾
The WarJanes babyfaces get interviewed and Ripley reveals that Yim is her fourth. Ripley apologizes to Kai, who sullenly walks off. If Kai doesn’t turn heel then they’re doing this wrong. I don’t care if it’s obvious, it works.
Dominik Dijakovic def. Isaiah Scott
This was great in spurts, and since the match was relatively short those spurts were able to come in quick succession. Some of the counters here were really wild, though I sort of wish that matches like this, wherein guys who have never wrestled each other in NXT before, would have fewer of them. They’re fun to watch, but when they don’t make storyline sense they’re a bit like too much candy. This is me finding something to complain about on a show with very little to complain about. Dijakovic won at 7:17 with Feast Your Eyes. ***¼
The Forgotten Sons get a little spotlight. They announce that next week we’ll see Io Shirai vs. Yim in a ladder match for the advantage in WarJanes.
Tommaso Ciampa, Keith Lee & Matt Riddle nc. AJ Styles, Karl Anderson & Luke Gallows
Mauro Ranallo insisting on calling the Good Brothers “one of the greatest tag teams in the world” instead of the goofy Saudi trophy title was so promising, until he corrected himself moments later. Nothing can stop the crushing power of the KSA, even the walls of Full Sail University. On this night, Lee is the most over guy in NXT. This match was molten crowd-fueled balls-to-the-wall action. I’d be tempted to take off points for the non-finish, but it was like a fever dream for wrestling nerds. With the referee taken out, Ciampa prepared to hit Styles with the Fairy Tale Ending. Finn Balor’s music hit, distracting Ciampa. Balor took out Riddle and had a Bullet Club bro-down with Styles. Then, Styles goes for the Styles Clash on Ciampa, only to be attacked by Adam Cole. Then then takes out Ciampa as well and has a friendly stare-down with Balor. Balor is like this evil mastermind and somehow he’s changed his face to look like more of a sleaze. I love it. There was no closing bell, but let’s assume the match was thrown out when Cole’s music hit after his attack. That puts us at 13:28 (or 10:48 for those who won’t see the picture-in-picture action). ****