NXT UK 124

November 26, 2020 – Newham, London

I do not hate this Thanksgiving tradition of watching British wrestling. The show starts with a hard-sell, very polished video hyping the tournament final main event. I’m sold, but now my expectations are high. 

Jordan Devlin def. Amir Jordan {NXT Cruiserweight Championship Match}
This was mostly a first gear affair, but Jordan played the crafty underdog well. Devlin is still moving slowly for a cruiserweight, but he’s balancing that by laying in the offense hard. I especially liked the way Jordan came at Devlin from different angles in the corner near the end. Devlin put on the Cloverleaf for the win at 9:40. **3/4

Rampage Brown is ready for any challenger, including Saxon Huxley, who seems to be obsessed with him. Then, Noam Dar hypes his new chat show, the Supernova Sessions. Then, Flash Mandrews attacks the Hunt. They’ll fight next week. 

Jinny def. Isla Dawn
This was all about reestablishing Jinny as someone we should care about as she moves into a feud with Piper Niven. Despite Dawn being touted as a kickboxer, it’s Jinny who throws kicks throughout this thing. It’s fine, but neither of these two are all that interesting. Jinny wins with an STF at 5:05. **

Alexander Wolfe wants a match against Joe Coffey with Gallus banned from ringside. Sid Scala agrees to make the match if Imperium is also banned. Two of them are in the States, so it’s really just keeping WALTER away. I guess that makes sense. 

A-Kid def. Trent Seven {NXT UK Heritage Cup Match}
I could have sworn they said they’d do five-minute rounds for big matches but it’s three-minute rounds here. A-Kid wants to establish his legacy, while Seven knows that this is one of the last opportunities he’ll have in his career to do something big. The first round goes by without much ado. A-Kid goes after the leg in the second round, but Seven ends the round with a punch. A-Kid takes offense and comes out guns blazing in the third round. He wins the first fall at 1:33 with a series of kicks. Seven fights from behind in the fourth round, finally putting an end to A-Kid’s momentum with a powerbomb. A-Kid almost wins the fifth round with a wild avalanche crossbody, but time runs out. Seven throws everything he has at A-Kid in the sixth round, and though A-Kid kicks out of it all Seven counters an armbar to a roll up to tie the match at 2:30 at the round. In sudden death, Seven hits a few massive bombs. But he screws up not going for a cover after the Seven Star Lariat. Instead he thinks (wrongly) that it’d be safer to pick A-Kid up for a Birminghammer. A-Kid avoids it and eventually uses the error to put on his Rings of Saturn for the win at 5:18 of overtime for the win. This was the first time that I felt the rounds system hampered the flow of the match. The story totally worked for me, as did the finish. But there were times that I really wanted the match to keep moving when it couldn’t. It was very good, but it could have been great. Seven hands A-Kid the trophy to end the show. ***¾