February 24, 2001 – Orlando, Florida
Dexter Lumis def. Johnny Gargano
Lumis has tweaked his game enough that his matches aren’t unbearable anymore. They’re still not good, but they’re watchable. The story here is that Lumis now has some kind of emotional hold over Austin Theory and that Indi Hartwell is crushing on Lumis as well. Seems a little soon to have potential dissention in the ranks of the Way. Theory couldn’t bring himself to attack Lumis with a chair, which distracted Gargano and allowed Lumis to put on the Silence at 10:04 (shown). **¼
They’re now actually acknowledging when one of the commentators isn’t in the building, as Wade Barrett is calling in remotely though we aren’t told why. Then, MSK gets a hype video. It’d be silly not to put the tag titles on them and let them run with them. However, the Grizzled Young Veterans attack them backstage, so that’s not great. Later, Cameron Grimes is inspired by a legendary Ted DiBiase clip to do some million-dollar exploiting of his own. Turns out he didn’t watch the whole video to see that DiBiase rigs the games he gets people to play, so he has to pay some guy on the crew $1,000 for dribbling a basketball ten times.
Malcolm Bivens thought that Leon Ruff would be easy pickins, so he baited Ruff into a match tonight. But before the match can start, Isaiah Scott brutally attacks Ruff. Rust declares himself the winner by forfeit.
Io Shirai def. Zoey Stark
Looks like I wasn’t the only person impressed with Stark’s singles debut. This wasn’t the same flashy performance from Stark as we got last week, but she wasn’t going to be getting over on Shirai in the same way. Still, the match was a solid go-round for as long as it went around. Shirai hit the moonsault for the win at 8:00 (shown). After the match, Toni Storm comes out and says that Shirai is scared to defend the title against her 1-on-1. Shirai more or less accepts the challenge. **¼
Theory tells Gargano that Lumis is misunderstood and he didn’t deserve to be hit with a chair. Hartwell admits that she finds Lumis hot. Gargano is sending Theory to therapy. Are they just hoping we forget about the Lumis vs. Roderick Strong feud? I guess the reactions of the two kidnapping victims are different, but the rest of the angle is exactly the same so far. Later, Grimes tries the basketball trick on Anriel Howard, but she’s got moves and avoids the kick to win the money. Later still, Grimes finds Jacob Kasper (who kind of looks like Chris Nowinsky) and just knocks him out to stop him from dribbling.
Xia Li def. Kacy Catanzaro
I’m glad Kayden Carter was able to escape Wes Lee’s purge attempt to accompany Catanzaro to the ring. But now Catanzaro has to deal with Li’s purge. They love the word purge. This was short but energetic. Li won by TKO after she injured Catanzaro’s knee to the point that Catanzaro couldn’t continue at 4:43. Li hits a cheap shot while the refs are attending to Catanzaro but is sort of chased away by Carter. *¾
Zack Gibson & James Drake def. Killian Dain & Drake Maverick
We learn that the GYV have broken Lee’s hand, so that tag title match is probably off of next week’s show. That sucks. Lots of UK boys in this one. Not much to go crazy for here, but both teams did their tandem stuff to disguise that fact. The GYV hit the Ticket to Mayhem on Maverick for the win at 5:09 (shown). Pretty lame to put a commercial in the middle of a match that doesn’t go at least ten minutes. **
In the back, Alexander Wolfe rips on Dain for not being a monster anymore. Dain shrugs it off and asks for a doctor to look at Maverick. Later, LA Knight says he’ll debut when he’s good and ready.
Karrion Kross def. Santos Escobar {No Disqualification Match}
It’s almost cute the way they tried to make it seem like this had a coherent story attached to it when in fact it was an ill-conceived pairing forced on us through a series of disconnected events. I can’t help but think that if this match had happened in the Temple, where they would surely be blood, it would have been more compelling. As it is, it’s a slow brawl that turns into a handicap match so we can see that Kross can beat three guys at once. But the shine is totally off of this guy, dulled by the injury when he was champion and certainly extinguished by this nothing feud. I feel like he would have been super popular in late-’90s ECW. He’s big and tattooed and hits just enough suplexes. And he has a hot woman with him. But in NXT, there’s not much there there. Time to move him to the main roster. He hit a Saito suplex through the announce table, another in the ring, and then hit the elbow to the back of the head for the win at 13:05 (shown). It’s not like the cruiserweight division in the United States is worth anything, but beating the champion and his stable like this is awful for them and I’m not sure what it does for Kross. **¾
Adam Cole comes to the ring for a main event promo. He has put Kyle O’Reilly on the shelf for over a month. He attacked O’Reilly because he failed more than once in his attempts to win the NXT Championship. But he says he was wrong for hurting O’Reilly. Roderick Strong comes out to run down Cole, saying he kept Strong in the dark and that this apology isn’t worth anything. He won’t save Cole from O’Reilly once he heals. But when Finn Balor attacks, Strong does save Cole from him. Cole takes out Balor. Strong slugs Cole in frustration but then apologizes. They hug, but Cole hits Strong in the gooch, calls him stupid, and thrust kicks his face.