September 24, 2020 – Newham, London
WALTER def. Saxon Huxley
They laid on the All Japan references here really thick. You had Huxley channeling Bruiser Brody (which wasn’t lost on Nigel McGuinness on commentary), WALTER channeling Billy Robinson with a butterfly superplex, and McGuinness calling out the King’s Road style. If Huxley can translate a performance like this into something longer they might be able to get something out of him. WALTER hit a powerbomb for the win at 6:09. **¼
Huxley runs into Jack Starz in the back and says, “next time,” over and over again.
The known wrestlers in the Heritage Cup Tournament are in the ring with NXT UK Assistant GM Sid Scala and Pete Dunne. Dunne is looking very slim. The draw gives us Joseph Conners vs. Dave Mastiff, Trent Seven vs. the wildcard entrant, Flash Morgan Webster vs. A-Kid, and Noam Dar vs. Alexander Wolfe. Dar goes for a cheap shot on Wolfe, but Dunne stops him and breaks his finger.
Sam Stoker & Lewis Howley def. Wild Boar & Primate
This was fun, if a little bit frantic. Both teams got to get their personalities over and the right team probably won. I think they could do more with the Hunt, but I do think that now is the time to make the move on a pair of younger guys. You don’t have to worry about who is over with the crowd anyway, so you might as well try something out with a pair of newer fellas. Stoker rolled up Boar at 8:02 for the win. Eddie Dennis shows up on the ramp after the match and whispers something to Pretty Deadly. **¾
Flash Mandrews tries to cheer up the Hunt backstage. I don’t think I care for the Hunt having friends who aren’t the Hunt. Meanwhile, Dunne volunteers to referee the Dar vs. Wolfe match next week so that the tournament doesn’t spin out of control. They announce that the wildcard spot will be decided next week in a triple threat match.
Kay Lee Ray def. Piper Niven {NXT UK Women’s Championship Match}
Niven’s tartan gear is dope. I hate when a mid-match injury angle stops a match dead in its tracks. Here, KLR missed a knee to the face and hit the steps. Referees slowly started to bring her to the back, but then Niven decided she didn’t mind winning the title against an injured champion. The story was rock solid, but the start and stop execution of it was annoying. Niven missed a cannonball in the corner and hit an exposed turnbuckle, which was enough to give KLR the win at 14:23. The way the turnbuckle got exposed was pretty great: KLR pulled it off when Niven pulled her away from the ropes, and though the referee tried to reattach it he had to abandon that task because it looked like Niven was about to make KLR tap. Some good stuff here, but the flow was off. Jinny stares at KLR from the ramp as the show ends. I have no interest in that match. ***