November 13, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida
The show starts with a recap of last week’s show and I think Bobby Fish might have been murdered based on the blood splatter his face left on the wall.
Lio Rush def. Angel Garza {NXT Cruiserweight Championship Match}
Garza and Rush’s entrance songs have the same beat and it’s kind of irritating. During the match there was a commercial for a Duluth no yank tank top, which might as well be a TC Tuggers commercial. The crowd was rabid for this, and with good reason. These two have crazy exciting offense, and they weaved their moves together nicely. Rush is surprisingly effective as a babyface, selling like a lunatic for Garza’s huge maneuvers. And Garza is an unsurprisingly dope heel. Tearing away his pants in front of Rush’s family was a really hilariously dickish move from Garza. The way they built to the Come Up, following that up with a receipt slap from last week’s offense, kicking out of the Wing Clipper after a second Come Up was blocked, and then blocking an avalanche Wing Clipper was a series of events that made me feel warm all over. I didn’t think they’d be able to find a really satisfying finish after that, and I was kind of right as Rush hitting two Final Hours for the win at 9:19 (shown of 12:54) felt a little anticlimactic as a capper. It wasn’t a bad finish, it just felt a little bit matter-of-fact after the wildness that had preceded it. Anyway, I want them to do it again at Takeover. ***¾
Tegan Nox and Rhea Ripley have been attacked out outside of the building. Then we get a recap of Shayna Baszler’s antics on Smackdown and Raw this past week.
Xia Li def. Aliyah
Apparently, Malcolm Bivens is scoping out talent just like Robert Strauss was last week. This is a match that NXT decided to put on cable television twice. And speaking of lame things, Mauro Ranallo says, “Okay, boomer,” and then compares the line to, “Boom goes the dynamite,” so I think we can officially call it a dead meme. This was messy and bad, and I can’t understand why they don’t cut bait on Aliyah. Li kicks Aliyah’s face off and gets a TKO win at 2:07. N/A
Finn Balor comes to the ring for a chat. He thinks NXT is a joke now. The heart of NXT Johnny Gargano hasn’t shown up in the three weeks since Balor attacked him because NXT is riddled with a bunch of boys. Matt Riddle attacks him and Balor runs off after a little scuffle. The Undisputed Era rushes out, so Tommaso Ciampa and Keith Lee do the same to get Riddle’s back. Lee duels on the mic with Cole, and it’s really nice to see this guy get a main event-level spot after a year of struggles. Roderick Strong freaks out that Lee is stepping to Cole and challenges Lee to a match so his buddy can have the night off. Lee isn’t that picky (that’s a bit of an unintentional shot at Mia Yim). The match will happen right now.
Keith Lee def. Roderick Strong
The match was joined in progress after a commercial break, and then went to another commercial after just five minutes of action. That’s very irritating, but it became clear given the extended post-match shenanigans why they did it. A few cool moments aside, this fell flat. Beth Phoenix trying to jam Star Wars references into her commentary was cringy, though Ranallo calling out the Sick Kick (a move name that I coined) for the first time in forever almost made up for it. The finish was obscured by a battle between Riddle & Ciampa and the Undisputed Era & Balor. A distracted Lee wasn’t distracted enough, and he caught Strong with the Supernova at 14:06 (shown). The brawl continues after the match, with Dominik Dijakovic evening the odds (Balor had walked out of the arena after attacking Riddle). After the Undisputed Era is taken care of, Lee and Dijakovic finally make peace. That was a fun way to get Dijak involved in WarJames, though the match wasn’t anything to write home about. **¾
Jessamyn Duke, Marina Shafir, and Candice LeRae have all been laid out. They try to play this up as some mystery, but it’s clearly meant to be the Raw and Smackdwon ladies as a smokescreen to the inevitable Dakota Kai heel turn.
Isaiah Scott def. Bronson Reed
I’m not into Scott’s new music. What was wrong with his Steven Universe theme (aside from it being repetitive)? Reed now has “THiCC” printed on his singlet. They take a commercial break during this match too. Why? Why not just have it be a short match?! Did you know every mid-match commercial break is exactly three minute and nineteen seconds long? That’s something useless I’ve learned. What useless thing have you learned today? Anyway, let’s talk a bit about this match. In a cute moment, Reed goes for an avalanche piledriver (but obviously doesn’t hit it) after teasing on Twitter a few days ago that he wanted to use the move. You shouldn’t have to follow wrestlers on Twitter to enjoy things about a match, but it was a nice bonus for me. The rest of the match was serviceable enough, but never kicked into high gear. It also feels like the Breakout Tournament guys are just diddling around in the midcard without direction. Scott won in 8:38 (shown of 11:57) with the House Call. That’s not all that convincing of a finisher. They shake hands after the match. **¾
Matt Riddle has been replaced by Dijakovic in WarJames so he can fight Balor at Takeover. That’s probably the best case scenario given Gargano’s injuries, and leaves the door open for another surprise to take the last open spot on Ciampa’s team. Unrelated: the Forgotten Sons get another video package.
Pete Dunne vs. Killian Dain never happens because Damien Priest attacks Dain during his entrance. The three of them have a fun ol’ brawl, and we seem to have a recipe for a triple threat match at Takeover. Sadly, we don’t get NXT General Manager William Regal coming out on the ramp to yell at everyone involved and book the match in real time. Priest comes out on top of the ordeal.
Before the main event, Yim was interviewed and called out Raw and Smackdown for the attacks. But then Dakota Kai walked in and told Yim that she had her back, telegraphing that she’s the one who actually attacked everyone.
Next week, it’s Cole vs. Dijak in a ladder match to see who gets the advantage in the WarGames match. But before that, we get the same stipulation for the women in the main event…
Io Shirai def. Mia Yim {Ladder Match}
The match these two had at the pseudo-Takeover the night that AEW first went up against NXT was better than this match. This had a few gnarly bumps, but it also had a lot of dead time during the picture-in-picture commercial break, and it also had plenty of awkwards moments the rest of the time. There just wasn’t much to it save for Yim getting her nose broken when the ladder got dropkicked into her face. They really lucked out that Yim was even able to finish the match and execute the Kai angle. What’s the Kai angle? I thought it was going to be Kai turning heel, but it ended up being Kai coming out to help Yim, and then Kay Lee Ray of all people running out to attack Kai and Yim and hand the win to Shirai at 17:31 (shown of 19:59). Most of the points here are given because I was genuinely surprised by the finish. The nice outcome here is that if Yim is actually injured, Kai slipping into her spot at Takeover works nicely. It seems like that might have been the plan all along. ***
After the match, Shayna Baszler comes out to to celebrate with her team when she’s laid out by Bayley. I’m not sure if we’re meant to believe that KLR, Bayley, or some combination of the two was attacking the ladies outside tonight, and I doubt they’ll address it directly.
The opening match and the main event surprises were nice, but the rest of the show felt like filler for the first time in a while. Kind of a let down of an episode, but I guess they can’t all blow my mind.
A couple days later, NXT invaded Smackdown again. I’d give it its own post again like I did the last two weeks, but these invasions became less thoughtful as they went on so now I’m just going to tack this one onto the review here. It could also be because this match was impromptu and they didn’t have a graphic for it and that’s important to me for some reason, but that’ll be our little secret.
November 15, 2019 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Before we get to the actual match featuring NXT that happened on the show, I’ll mention that the Undisputed Era interrupted a tag team title match earlier in the show, taking out the New Day and the Revival until a bunch of jobbers made the save. It’s only relevant because it led to a couple of matches the following week on NXT and Smackdown.
Sasha Banks, Dana Brooke, Carmella & Nikki Cross def. Rhea Ripley, Mia Yim, Tegan Nox & Dakota Kai
This came about because Shayna Baszler interrupted a Bayley vs. Cross match, and then just to irritate those of us who like NXT, the WarJanes babyfaces came out to attack Bayley. Look, it actually tracks that these women would invade Smackdown, since Bayley attacked two of them on NXT this week, but wouldn’t it have been better to have the NXT team here be Bianca Belair, Io Shirai, Jessamyn Duke, and Marina Shafir? You’d have the Horsewomen to take the fall, and it’d make leave dumb wrestling fans less confused. At least they had Kai, who won’t be in WarJanes, available to take the fall (Cross pinned her with the Purge in 6:28 (shown)). The match was alright; it featured a decent showdown between Ripley and Banks, and then a decent final minute. The finish came out of nowhere, and Team Kick looked a little out of their element, but that almost worked in favor of the story of the match. Right, so it was fine, but really emblematic of the slapdash march to two shows that have contrasting goals. **¼
On Raw the following Monday, NXT did a few run ins, but didn’t participate in any matches. I suppose that’s for the best, since NXT UK got rolled on Raw the week before and Raw just kind of sucks in general. Triple H did try to convince Kevin Owens to defect to NXT, but then the Undisputed Era attacked Owens and Triple H seemed confused about that but they never followed up on it. They also never addressed the irony of Triple H trying to recruit anyone after doing so to Seth Rollins only to turn on him.