NXT 542

Alright, so we’ve got a best of 2019 show here, plus the results of the end of year awards, plus they’re airing the top three matches in the match of the year category. Kathy Kelly, Pat McAfee, and Sam Roberts are hosting again. First up, the number three Match of the Year. From NXT Takeover: XXV, though I think a LOT of the other matches nominated deserve to be higher up than this one. 

June 1, 2019 – Bridgeport, Connecticut

Montez Ford & Angelo Dawkins def. Steve Cutler & Wesley Blake, Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly, and Oney Lorcan & Danny Burch {NXT Tag Team Championship Ladder Match}
The Street Profits have been a team for over three years, and this is their first Takeover. That’s pretty wild. It’s the Forgotten Sons’ first Takeover despite being around since last summer, but who cares? This was one of those ladder matches that leaned toward being slightly more about spots than about winning the match, and that’s not so much my bag. The seams on quite a few of those spots were showing too, but that’s what happens when you try to plan a lot of complicated sequences that need a prop. That said, a lot of this match was really exciting and well-executed, and the mini-story of the Jaxson Ryker problem in the middle of the match was a cool arc. The crowd was really into the Profits winning so that was nice too. ***¾

Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly beat the Street Profits, the Grizzled Young Veterans, and Flash Mandrews to win the Tag Team of the Year award. They actually make an acceptance speech in an empty ring at Full Sail, which is pretty cool. NXT General Manager William Regal presents them with the award. O’Reilly thinks the award should be called Collective Brotherhood of the Year because they work in any combination. Were there really only four teams nominated for this award? Weren’t the War Raiders also nominated? No mention of them here. 

Adam Cole beat WALTER, Velveteen Dream, Tommaso Ciampa, Johnny Gargano, and Tyler Bate for Male Competitor of the Year. He promises to win the award every year to come, and that the award will be named after him. Bate and Gargano didn’t get video packages like the other four, but were shown on the screen behind the hosts. Weird. 

Shayna Bazler beat Rhea Ripley, Io Shirai, Kay Lee Ray, Bianca Belair, and Toni Storm to win the Female Competitor of the Year Award. It’s weird to see her without the title belt. She says she’s not done dominating or coming for the title. 

Adam Cole vs. Johnny Gargano wins Rivalry of the Year. It beat out British Strong Style vs. Imperium, Candice LeRae vs. Io Shirai, Rhea Ripley vs. Shayna Baszler, and Roderick Strong vs. Velveteen Dream. Gargano and Cole come out to accept the award. Gargano says since it’s his second year in a row winning this award, it’s obvious that he keeps getting involved with horrible people. He regrets that his 77-year-old father didn’t punch Cole in the face at his restaurant. Regal keeps things profesional. I’m kind of surprised that Finn Balor didn’t get involved here at all, as he’s at odds with both guys. 

The number two Match of the Year was from NXT Takeover: War Games 3, and I really can’t argue with how high this was rated. 

November 23, 2019 – Rosemont, Illinois

Rhea Ripley, Dakota Kai, Candace LeRae & Tegan Nox def. Shayna Baszler, Bianca Belair, Io Shirai & Kay Lee Ray {War Games}
There were a lot of great character moments in this match, chief of which was KLR refusing to get tables from under the ring and taking down chair structures because she didn’t think the crowd deserved those things. RIpley tearing through her opponents even as it caused collateral damage to her teammates. Kai immediately turning on Nox and destroying her knee as soon as it was her time to enter the ring was also excellently done, happening earlier and being a lot more brutal than I expected. Baszler looking on laughing was delightful. Screw everything I said before, this was better than I could have imagined. Ripley & LeRae trying to hold their own when they were down 2-4 made them look great too, and the weapons and cage made it almost believable. This turned out to be the best handicap match I can remember ever seeing (or at least tied with the Rock N’ Sock WrestleMania match). Oh, it was also better than the men’s WarJames matches from the last two years. The finish was absolutely beautiful. Shirai had taken out herself, Belair, and LeRae with a moonsault off of the cage, then Ripley wiped out KLR coming off of the top with a trash can swing, and then Ripley cuffed herself to Baszler and hit her with the Riptide onto a chair bridge for the win at 27:26. It also didn’t hurt that it was the shortest War Games match yet. There’s a lot to be said for being efficient. Screw it, I loved this so much. I hope the main event can come close. *****

Dakota Kai beat Kushida, Xia Li, Bronson Reed, Tegan Nox, Ilja Dragunov, Isaiah Scott, Taynara, and Cameron Grimes to win the Future Star of the Year award. She craps on the people who voted for her because she has always thought of herself this way. They’re just late to the party. 

They announce the teams for the 2020 Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic. Four from NXT and four from NXT UK. We get Fish & O’Reilly, Wesley Blake & Steve Cutler, Matt Riddle & Pete Dunne (weird pair but I’m not mad at it), Kushida & a mystery partner, Gibson & Drake, Andrews & Webster, and Coffey & Wolfgang. It’s kind of funny that the UK entrants are also the four teams in the UK Takeover tag title match coming up. It’s also sad that the tag team scene on the Flagship side of things is so thin that there are only two real tag teams coming from the States. 

Takeover: War Games 3 wins the Takeover of the Year award. New York was better, and maybe the best wrestling show I’ve ever seen, but whatever this category is kind of dumb anyway. 

Keith Lee beats Damian Priest, Matt Riddle, Candace LeRae, Rhea Ripley, Dominik Dijakovic, Angel Garza, Joe Coffey, and Piper Niven for the Breakout Star of the Year award. Triple H gives him the award backstage. He cuts a cookie-cutter speech and throws his meme-able “OH MY GOD” singing into the mix. 

They announce the Match of the Year, and it’s really no surprise. It was called the best match in NXT history when it happened, and that’s pretty hard to argue (though I do argue it). From Takeover: New York, the main event of what probably should have won Takeover of the Year.

April 6, 2019 – Brooklyn, New York

Johnny Gargano def. Adam Cole {NXT Championship Two-Out-Of-Three Falls Match}
In the building, Cole was way more over with the crowd than Gargano was. In the finishing stretch, people in my section were getting very upset every time Gargano kicked out, and to be honest he kicked out of so many killer Cole moves that it felt like overkill. On rewatch it really didn’t feel like overkill at all. Let’s unpack this thing because there’s a lot here. First you have Cole, and arrogant prick leader of a group that isn’t afraid to get involved in one another’s matches, who has told his opponent that his Takeover milestones and his teammates will help carry him to victory. Then you have Gargano, whose months-long plan to get another title shot against his arch nemesis seemingly went up in flames when said nemesis went down with a possibly career-ending injury. Those two stories crashed together here spectacular fashion, as Gargano absorbed everything that Cole threw at him, caught on to Cole’s patterns, and tapped him out twice to win the title. What makes his title win here all the more satisfying is that he didn’t have to sacrifice his ethics to do it. After months of cheating and losing or cheating only to win the secondary title, he won like a man and got the biggest prize of all (while Cole lost even though he cheated as much as he could). After the match, as Gargano celebrates with Candice LeRae and his family, Tommaso Ciampa comes out and congratulates his best friend. With his career possibly over, there’s no more need for competitive animosity. The spectre of Ciampa hung heavy over this match, with both Gargano and Cole using moves from the former champ’s arsenal to play mind games and get an advantage. While this wasn’t the ending to the Gargano/Ciampa story we were expecting, it was very satisfying given the circumstances. *****

For the record, here’s how I rated the other Match of the Year nominees (technically I think any match could have been voted for but these were the ones NXT called out on social media):

  • WALTER vs. Tyler Bate – NXT UK Takeover: Cardiff – ****¾ 
  • Johnny Gargano vs. Adam Cole – NXT Takeover: Toronto 2019 – ****½  
  • Candice LeRae vs. Io Shirai – NXT Takeover: Toronto 2019 – ****¼ 
  • Hanson & Rowe vs. Roderick Strong & Kyle O’Rilly – NXT Takeover: Phoenix – ****¼ 
  • Io Shirai vs. Shayna Baszler – NXT 513 – ****
  • Pete Dunne vs. Adam Cole – Survivor Series 2019 – ****
  • Flash Morgan Webster & Mark Andrews vs. Zack Gibson & James Drake vs. Mark Coffey & Wolfgang – NXT UK Takeover: Cardiff – ****
  • Rhea Ripley vs. Shayna Baszler – NXT 540 – ****
  • Roderick Strong vs. Velveteen Dream – NXT 526 – ***¾ 
  • Keith Lee vs. Dominik Dijakovic – NXT 530 – ***¾ – They actually didn’t specify which match between these two was nominated, but I’m listing the one I rated highest. I believe I went *** for the rest of their singles matches. 
  • Mia Yim vs. Io Shirai vs. Candice LeRae vs. Bianca Belair – NXT 526 – ***¼ 

My Match of the Year didn’t even make the list! It was Gargano vs. Cole in their one-fall-to-a-finish match at Takeover: XXV. 

The show closes with Cole winning Overall Competitor of the Year. The Undisputed Era engages in a huge group hug and then tries to figure out how to get out of the ring with the six golden bells they won tonight.