Andy Shepherd was finally let out of his apartment and is standing in front of an NXT UK step and repeat banner. He throws it to NXT UK Assistant GM Sid Scala, who announces an eight-man tournament for an NXT UK Heritage Cup. Matches will be under British Rounds Rules. NXT GM William Regal lays out the rules. There are a lot of rules, but basically it’s 2/3 Falls to win, or knockout to win, or whoever is ahead at the end of six three-minute rounds wins. Flash Morgan Webster, Noam Dar, A-Kid, Dave Mastiff, Joseph Conners, Trent Seven, and Alexander Wolfe are the entrants. I’m into this because it gives NXT UK a unique reason to exist, which is something it needed after five months off.
Scala announces that in two weeks, Kay Lee Ray will defend the NXT UK Women’s Championship against Piper Niven. Then they show a deep dive into KLR and Niven’s history with each other. This really should have been the match at Takeover: Blackpool II, but this brand needed to get all it could out of Toni Storm.
February 27, 2020 – York, North Yorkshire
Kay Lee Ray def. Toni Storm {NXT UK Women’s Championship I Quit Match}
In a total coincidence, other projects I’m working on led to me seeing the Rock vs. Mankind and Sexy Star vs. Mariposa I Quit matches recently, and I’m really digging on the stipulation right now. I think they goofed not having the referee have a microphone here. The passionate things wrestlers say while denying to quit is the best part of this stip. Most of the match is pretty solid. They tease an homage to Royal Rumble ‘99, but Storm cuts that off with a headbutt. Instead of hitting chairshots to the face with Storm’s hands bound, KLR Pillmanizes Storm’s neck and then does it again off of the ropes as Sid Scala, Johnny Saint and Piper Niven come out to ask KLR to stop. KLR threatens to do it off the top so Storm tearfully quits at 12:55. That finish took the steam out of the match, and didn’t really give us anything that we didn’t get out of their match in Cardiff (Storm’s emotions and fear keeping her from winning). Niven checks on Storm as the show comes to an end. Storm won’t get another shot at the title as long as KLR is champion (which thanks to COVID turned out to be a very long time). ***
Gallus is tired of how much NXT UK has been boasting this big tag division. Next week, they’re putting the division on notice. Then, Regal, Robbie Brookside, and Drew McIntyre video chat about the Heritage Cup. They show a very cool photo of McIntyre as a child meeting Yokozuna. Brookside has no art on his walls. I’ve always thought that was psychopathic. Maybe it’s a temporary BnB.
Next week, KLR speaks, more Heritage Cup details are revealed (perhaps the final entrant?), and gallus will face Amir Jordan & Kenny Williams. Fresh.
July 24, 2019 – Donington Park, Leicestershire
WALTER def. Trent Seven
WALTER got heat during this match, and that warmed the cockles of my heart. The crowd didn’t just chant for Seven, they didn’t just do the Trent Seven Army chant, but they chanted lines from his promo two weeks ago. I guess they were saving up all their energy for these last two matches of the tapings. It didn’t matter though, because as hard as Seven fought, and he fought as hard as we’ve seen him fight since his tag wars with the Undisputed Era, WALTER was able to absorb it all and give better than he got. The match had a perfect finish; WALTER powerbombed Steven against the apron, just like Imperium did to put Tyler Bate on the shelf. Then Imperium came out and stood guard while WALTER hit Seven with powerbomb after powerbomb until the referee called for the bell at 14:15 because Seven was just a sack of meat. This surpassed my expectations, and worked amazingly as a big boy brawl that Seven just wasn’t able to handle. ****¼