NXT UK 111

We’ve got a mix of stuff I’ve seen before and liked and stuff I’ve never seen today. That’s not bad now that I know I only have to review three more of these archive shows before NXT UK comes back for real on 9/17.

December 28, 1984 – New York, New York

The Cobra def. Black Tiger {WWF Junior Heavyweight Championship Match}
William Regal picked this match in honor of the recently departed Mark “Rollerball” Rocco, who wrestled as Black Tiger. From WWF on MSG, Tiger’s only WWF match ever. This was to crown a champion for the vacant title. This was a cooperative title between WWF and New Japan. Dynamite Kid was the previous champion, but he relinquished the belt when he left Japan to be a tag team wrestler in WWF full time. Gorilla Monsoon is doing commentary solo because Mean Gene just walked away from the booth. These two work pretty damn hard but the crowd just doesn’t care. Well, eventually the wrestlers stop working so hard (and why shouldn’t they?). The last couple minutes see a wild kneeling piledriver, a missed flying elbowdrop, a sick dropkick, and Cobra winning with a diving senton at 12:31. The title was retired a year later when WWF and NJPW’s cooperation ended. It was last seen as one of the belts that made up the first Super J Cup trophy, which Chris Benoit won. ***

October 28, 2018 – Uniondale, New York

Toni Storm def. Io Shirai {Tournament Finals}
From the Mae Young Classic finals at Evolution. When Storm got her knees up for the moonsault down the stretch, I marked out huge. This was a lot of fun, almost as good as Storm’s match against Meiko Satomura. This was also the first time since her debut that Shirai looked like a world-killer badass. Storm got a bit more offense here than she did against Satomura, and the drama was just as thick. Storm won with the Storm Zero at 10:04. Storm liked this match so much she got the date tattooed on her arm. ****

They advertise the return of NXT UK for real, but now the return date has gone from September 17 to simply “This September.” Uh oh. On the bright side, next week is a look at WALTER and his number one contender Ilja Dragunov, so at least they’re keeping that going. I wonder if they’ll play one of the indie matches between them that they have available on the Network now. Mark Andrews & Flash Morgan Webster, the Hunt, Pretty Deadly, Imperium, Oliver Carter & Ashton Smith, Kenny Williams & Amir Jordan, and Gallus are highlighted as the tag division. No Moustache Mountain, though there was a clip of Tyler Bate & Trent Seven a bit earlier. Maybe they’re still around. 

February 27, 2014 – Winter Park, Florida 

Cesaro def. Sami Zayn
Dragunov picked this one. The crowd chanted match of the year before the match started, but I’ll try not to hold that against the match. The match certainly met the crowd’s (and internet’s) expectations, and while I liked it, I had a few more bones to pick than they did. I would have cut out at least five of the 23 minutes they were allotted, as the match had some odd pacing issues. Sami’s selling was pretty good, and the action was exciting when the two played off of their history with each other. But as I mentioned, it felt overlong and the finishing sequence felt like a shift from 1st to 4th gear. ***½ [2018 update: I still think this match is pretty overrated, and that their 2/3 Falls match is better by more than a little.] [Update in 2019: I still think this match is overrated, but not as overrated as I did before. It’s definitely longer than it needs to be, but Cesaro was in his killer cyborg mode here and Zayn had his working boots on too.] [Update in 2020: Cesaro beat Zayn with the Neutralizer at 22:58.] ****