NXT 547

February 5, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida 

Last week there was a short tease for a debut, and that same tease flashed in a few frames during the opening video package here. It also flashed during the opening match and at various points throughout the show. I dig that kinda biz. 

The Broserweights bring their Dusty Cup trophy into the arena in a custom golf cart. They have a little love-in before the tag champs interrupt. Kyle O’Reilly’s Canadian interpretation of their names is great. The champs would fights the Broserweights right now if they didn’t have bigger fish to fry. Riddle loves that Bobby Fish said fish and then turns it into a chant. This is the best Riddle. 

Angel Garza def. Isaiah Scott
I’m surprised to see Garza here after he debuted on Raw this week. Scott is turning that reverse powerbomb into a signature move, which is cool because as far as I know he invented it. This was a good bit of fun, high-flying action. I could have done with a longer version of it for sure. Garza picked up the win with the Wing Clipper at 7:02 (shown of 10:37). After the match, Garza brags about taking out Humberto Carrillo and Rey Mysterio on Raw. He challenges Jordan Devlin for the Cruiserweight Championship. I like that Garza can cut fiery promos even though is English isn’t the best. ***¼  

In the back, the Undisputed Era bully people while searching for Tommaso Ciampa. They find a kid getting a haircut, and Roderick Strong shaves off a big chunk of his hair. In other news, Mercedes Martinez has arrived and Sergeant Slaughter is in the audience. 

Dominik Dijakovic def. Killian Dain
Dain is alive! He approached Dijakovic at the Performance Center earlier in the day to say he wanted the North American Championship too. I love that the division is essentially all massive guys. The crowd fur-shames Dain, which is a real disgrace. On the other hand, it is quite warm in Florida. These are fun in part because Mauro Ranallo is clearly a fan of the beast battles, as he giggles and marks out throughout. That’s the Ranallo I really enjoy. This was a bite-sized version of match, but it was good while it lasted. Dijakovic won with Feast Your Eyes at 4:40 (shown of 8:15). Dijakovic earned a shot at Keith Lee’s title at Takeover: Portland, which apparently has six matches on it (Dakota Kai vs. Tegan Nox in a street fight was announced during the week). Lee comes out ot let him know he’s got the match. **¾ 

The Undisputed Era beats up Kushida and throws him in a trash can during their search for Ciampa. Bronson Reed doesn’t like that, so Strong takes him out. Later, Johnny Gargano and Finn Balor get interviewed by Ranallo. Balor has wanted to fight Gargano for four years while he’s watched him rise the ranks in NXT. Gargano says he’s already outshined Balor, but he wants to beat the longest reigning NXT Champion of all time to solidify his spot as the face of the brand. Balor doesn’t care if the match is good, he just wants to win. Gargano takes a swipe at the main roster to make sure we know he’s the babyface (“If the guy who lost to Bobby Lashley like 17 weeks in a row shows up in Portland, I’m going to eat him alive”). But heel Balor is dope as hell and it’s hard not to love him. 

Mercedes Martinez def. Kacy Catanzaro
It’s good to see Catanzaro back, but aside from avoiding a delayed vertical suplex and hitting a dropkick, this was a squash. Martinez won in 2:59 with the fisherman buster. N/A

Ciampa surprises the Undisputed Era and takes out Fish, Strong, and O’Reilly. He and Cole fight into the arena, but the Undisputed Era regroup and attack. The Broserweights make the save, setting up a six-man tag match. Can we get some justice for Kushida, Reed, and the kid who got his head shaved?

Jordan Devlin def. Tyler Breeze
This ran in somewhat stark contrast to the other cruiserweight match earlier on. It was slower-paced, more deliberate, and had more time to build in drama. Breeze channeled Lance Storm quite a bit here, throwing a bunch of dropkicks and working over the leg in anticipation of a half crab. In the end, Devlin won with the Devlin Side at 12:07 (shown of 15:33). Devlin’s woozy headbutt is my favorite thing in wrestling right now. ***½ 

Bianca Belair comes out and shows us that NXT can’t decide whether they want to drop the word “Women’s” from the title. She doesn’t care about Charlotte Flair, she just wants her face-to-face with Rhea Ripley. Flair comes out and gives Belair a compliment sandwich. Ripley comes out to address the accusation that she overlooked Belair. Before Flair can say whether or not she accepts Ripley’s WrestleMania challenge (made on Raw two nights earlier), Belair breaks out “you don’t even go here,” and says she’ll be the one wrestling Flair in Tampa. Having Flair drop a lightly racist (is “fix your braid” racist? I don’t know but it dropped like a turd and I hated it) comment during Black History Month (or ever) is weird. Ripley and Belair gang up on Flair and lay her out. They’re really dragging out a thin storyline here. 

Tommaso Ciampa, Matt Riddle & Pete Dunne def. Adam Cole, Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly
Before the match can begin, everyone brawls on the ramp and Strong gets put down. Strong came back and was a pest during the match. Riddle did not lead the crowd in a fish fry chant when Fish was in the ring, so that’s a huge missed opportunity. This did make me want a Riddle vs. O’Reilly singles match very badly. It was a pretty terrific mile-a-minute match, with Strong’s pesky interference giving it a bit of extra flavor. I also loved when Ciampa allowed Fish to tag out because he wanted to get his hands on Cole. It’s too bad this didn’t have a finish, as Strong eventually ran in and got his boys disqualified at 13:41. The Undisputed Era beat up our heroes after the match and spray paint Ciampa’s back. Cole is about to hit the Last Call, but the lights go out and Velveteen Dream returns. He was the guy behind the 2/5/20 message, and he takes out the whole group on his own. That was incredible. ***¾