NXT 559

April 22, 2020 – Orlando, Florida

The scheduled Velveteen Dream vs. Finn Balor match is called off at the top of the show because Balor is nowhere to be found. Dream comes out to talk about it, and then Adam Cole actually shows up in the building. I guess he’s not sick. Roderick Strong and Bobby Fish attack Dream from behind. Keith Lee makes the save. So we get a bait-and-switch tag match for our bait-and-switch singles match. What annoyingly weird time for this show. 

Dakota Kai & Raquel Gonzalez def. Tegan Nox & Shotzi Blackheart
Gonzalez looked good here, throwing everyone around at will. Her bits with Blackheart were the best, which isn’t surprising given they have experience against each other from their time in EVOLVE. Gonzalez pinned Blackheart with a powerbomb at 4:26 (shown 7:44). **

As mentioned last week, Drake Maverick was released but during his 90-day no-compete, he’s got a chance to win the NXT Cruiserweight Championship. The show is very transparent about that, and they use it to create a strong underdog story for Maverick. That’s insane to me, but I have to admit it makes for compelling TV. 

Jake Atlas def. Drake Maverick {Group A Round Robin Tournament Match}
Have I mentioned that this is insane? Because this is insane. This was very good. Most of it was Maverick running wild on the back of his last chance story. He hit many moves that would be match-enders were he a bigger guy. But then Atlas got control and quickly put Maverick away with the cartwheel DDT at 6:29. This is a much better use of Atlas than getting squashed by Dexter Lumis. Atlas stays over as a babyface by showing support for Maverick after the match, even as he puts over his own journey to the interim title. ***

They play a pre-WrestleMania ad for Raw. That’s embarrassing. Then we are baited into a Damian Priest vignette disguised as a Keith Lee vignette. He says that Lee has been picking opponents that he knows he can beat. Lee has never pinned him, and he wants another shot at Lee’s title. 

Kushida def. Tony Nese {Group A Round Robin Tournament Match}
Well that was terrific. Nese came at Kushida with a crazy amount of aggression and had Kushida on the ropes for most of the match. It took Kushida’s finesse and ability to find openings to give him the win with the Sakuraba Lock at 8:34 (shown of 11:07). ***¼ 

Matt Riddle lets us know that he loves T-Time Timothy Thatcher, but this is just a temporary situation until Pete Dunne comes back. It’s pretty much the same dynamic at Riddle and Dunne here, and I’d say it works about 80% as well. 

After one more vignette, Byron Saxton names Karion Kross & Scarlett and the folks behind the doomsday clock and the attack on Tommaso Ciampa. Then, Johnny Gargano checks in from his home, cutting a jazzy promo about marrying his wife and being the heart and soul of NXT. Candice LeRae brings dinner to the table (his protective cup displayed in a dome) as Gargano starts to run down the roster as being filled with sharks making it impossible for Gargano to be a good guy. LeRae feels the same way, saying she ate second so that they could eat first. They only trust each other now, and they’re going to tear NXT down together. They’ll be champions together when good guys win. I like this evil couple thing, I just wish they’d been able to pull the trigger on it a year ago. 

Io Shirai is stoked to fight Charlotte Flair for the title. No word on when that’s happening. Lots of heels in the women’s division right now. Later, Maverick puts over Atlas. But Maverick isn’t only fighting opponents like the rest of the field, he’s also fighting himself. He’s doubting himself, thinking that everyone might have been right about him. That match is next week, as is Damian Priest vs. Keith Lee in a North American Championship Match. 

Mia Yim def. Jesse Kamea
This was here to build up Yim for her eventual job to Flair. Why they’re wasting time on Yim vs. Flair when Shirai is the contender to that title I still don’t understand. Yim seemed tired here and Kamea just isn’t very good yet. Yim won in 3:11 with Protect Ya Neck. This did nothing to make me think that Yim is worthy to fight the champ. Flair shows up after the match and asks Yim if she wants to fight her. Yim would be honored. Flair brings up a match they had in 2014, and says that now like then Yim continues to be a good hand. Maybe they should have shown a clip of that match before this, as non NXT freaks like me wouldn’t remember a random enhancement match between these two from six years ago. ¾* 

Robert Stone and Chelsea Green hang out at a pool and gab about their delusions of grandeur. 

El Hijo del Fantasma def. Jack Gallagher {Group B Round Robin Tournament Match}
I can’t find a King Cuerno match anywhere online and it makes me ever so mad. This was a solid debut for Fantasma. He did get to show off his dope version of the Super Jump. Gallagher heeled it up nicely, going for the mask a couple times and generally being a jerk. Fantasma fought through a tug at the mask to hit a Samoan Driver for the win at 8:16 (shown of 11:40). After the match, Fantasma cuts a promo in Spanish. That’s interesting, since he’s a fluent English speaker. Later, Fantasma is in the parking lot and the kidnapping luchadors come for him, but he fights them off. I’m glad they didn’t just drop this angle. **¾ 

Velveteen Dream & Keith Lee def. Adam Cole & Roderick Strong
The commentators tell us to watch WWE social media for updates on Balor, so I have a feeling they’re going to say that Imperium attacked him. Fish got sent to the back early, but while the referee was doing that, Lee was attacked by Priest at ringside. After a commercial, Dream is going it alone. Out of nowhere, Lumis popped up on the apron to take Lee’s place. Fish came back to ringside just to help Strong take a dive from Lumis, and then Dream hit Cole with the Purple Rainmaker for the win at 6:11 (shown of 9:44). Lumis is a lot more tolerable in this environment, where he doesn’t have to carry the load of the match and isn’t in a position to put on a rest hold. That said, this was barely a match and was more just an opening, Dream getting beaten up, and Lumis making a comeback loosely strung together. **

A disappointing main event aside, this was a pretty damn good episode from a character development standpoint. I’m much more enthused going into next week than I was going into tonight’s episode.