January 21, 2021 – Newham, London
Rampage Brown def. Dave Mastiff
Since losing to Joe Coffey at Takeover: Blackpool, Mastiff’s theretofore unblemished win/loss record has really gone in the crapper. This was a dope little bulky boy bout. I could have watched more of this, but it was probably well-served being the length it was. It didn’t have time to get too dramatic, but as a spectacle seeing big fellas lift each other up it served its purpose. Brown shockingly hit a Doctor Bomb for the win at 6:32. ***
We see a retrospective on A-Kid’s shot at the NXT UK title. Kenny Williams tells Amir Jordan that he arranged for him to have a singles match against Tyson T-Bone. Williams wouldn’t have minded wrestling someone smaller. So this is the reverse of the Tyler Rust/Malcolm Bivens deal from last night. Later, they announce that Ben Carter will be in action again next week against Sam Gradwell.
Ilja Dragunov def. Jack Starz
The story here was that Dragunov had a very hard time staying in control over Starz of all people. The commentators shifted to cheering on Starz possibly getting the biggest win of his career, which is a nice way of not burying him despite his place on the roster. Dragunov loses his temper and starts recklessly beating Starz. He hits the Torpedo Moskau and the Bryan Danielson unprotected elbows for the TKO win at 6:46. That’s an effective way of getting Dragunov back in the game. I hope Starz is alright after some of those head drops. After the match, Dragunov regrets how far he went. ***
Amir Jordan def. Tyson T-Bone
I’m genuinely surprised that T-Bone is still on the roster, as he’s been off TV for almost ten months. I guess six of those months was time off for everyone. T-Bone got in good shape during his time off, so that’s good. He also moves around pretty quickly, beating up Jordan for most of the match. This was starting to feel a little long in the tooth in the final few moments, but Jordan’s last minute comeback felt realistic at least. He found a fun way to counter a sunset flip to one of his own for the win at 5:02. **¼
It’s been over a month since they’ve addressed the Xia Brookside vs. Nina Samuels feud. But here’s Brookside, saying that Samuels is dragging her family’s name through the mud (I don’t remember that), so I guess they’ll blow the thing off next week. Much like the Curt Stallion issue stateside, this was dreadfully paced. Also next week, the tag team elimination match to determine Gallus’s next challenger. Eddie Dennis will be banned from accompanying the Hunt to ringside.
Kay Lee Ray def. Jinny {NXT UK Women’s Championship Match}
Let’s get this over with so we can move on to the (rumored) Meiko Satomura feud for KLR. One of Jinny’s pre-match stats is that she’s undefeated since November 2019. Sounds like a long time to go undefeated, right? It’s only a six-match win streak. They make a point of showing Piper Niven, Dani Luna, Samuels, Brookside, and Amale watching on in the fan grid. That’s a sort of clever use of the big screen. Since it’s a heel vs. heel match that nobody asked for, they might as well get gimmicky with the atmosphere. KLR as the de facto babyface didn’t work for me and the match was a snooze. Conners tried to help Jinny cheat after she hit the Makeover, which doesn’t actually make sense, and got caught and broke up the pin. Then, KLR hit the Gory Bomb for the win at 11:09. That was kind of a disaster. *¾