NXT UK 70

November 14, 2019 – Brentwood, Essex

Kay Lee Ray def. Xia Brookside
No mention of KLR’s involvement on NXT last night, which is honestly kind of lazy. How hard would it have been to do some ADR and get a line about WarJanes added in? This match came at the end of a long night of tapings, so the crowd is a little burned out. It’s too bad, because the match is solid. KLR won in 7:02 with the Gory Bomb. Brookside got rolled a bit, which Nigel McGuinness blames on Brookside moving away from the British style in the match. I really hope they follow up on that and have Brookside come back with a more mat-based attack down the line. **½ 

We get a recap of Alexander Wolfe trying to woo Ilja Dragunov into Imperium, only for Dragunov to side with Gallus against him. There are a ton of matches I’d love to see coming out of that brawl, but none get announced now. They also show more from the Piper Niven interview, this time about how her wrestling career evolved. 

Travis Banks def. Ligero
This is a rematch from their sneaky fun draw a few weeks ago. They did a lot of mirror wrestling here, which should lead to them becoming a tag team. It’s not like they’re doing anything in the singles ranks of note. This actually exceeded their first match, as they teased a few double pin moments and then went on to just beat each other up in a very satisfying manner for a while. Sadly, the finish was awful, as Joseph Connors came out and attacked Ligero, leaving the masked man open to get hit with the Slice of Heaven at 9:55. After the match, Connors beat up Banks as well. Connors complains about being left behind by NXT UK despite being around from the beginning. He wasn’t the first UK champ. He wasn’t at the first UK Takeover (or the second). If he has to suffer, everyone else will suffer too. We already were suffering when you were on screen, bud. ***¼ 

Ridge Holland debuts next week. Alexander Wolfe interrupts a meeting of NXT General Managers William Regal, Johnny Saint, and Sid Scala to ask for a match against Dragunov, and he gets his wish. I guess that Jack Starz vs. Saxon Huxley match is on the cutting room floor, because it’s time for the main event. 

Tyler Bate def. Kassius Ohno
Well, that was Ohno’s best WWE match by a rather big stretch. This could have easily been a Takeover match. I was expecting something good here, but I didn’t expect them to get this much time or to make the match feel as epic as they did. It was basically the same formula as Bate’s match vs. WALTER, but with Ohno playing a less secure big man. That nuance added a lot more than doing a carbon copy version of the epic Cardiff match would have, and I appreciated it a lot. Bate fought from behind, but wasn’t as desperate because while dangerous, Ohno wasn’t as threatening as the champ. After a dope mat-based opening stretch that evolved into a gnarly exchange of brutal strikes, Bate weathered the storm and outsmarted Ohno where he could, finally hitting a hard-fought Tyler Driver ‘97 for the win at 24:03. If they can start delivering matches like this every few weeks, I’ll be very happy. ****¼