April 13, 2021 – Orlando, Florida
Karrion Kross & Scarlett start the show. Kross cuts a promo that leans farther into smiling babyface territory than I’d expect or want from him. Why is he acknowledging the fans in the building as if they’re his buddies? Whoever wrote this did a bad job. Time always comes full circle? I will roll off your heads? No matter where the time is told everyone pays the toll? What?! Nobody answers Kross’s apparent open challenge, so we start his reign with no momentum.
Nash Carter & Wes Lee def. Killian Dain & Drake Maverick {NXT Tag Team Championship Match}
Tag title matches two weeks in a row is such an insane increase in frequency for these belts that I can barely process it. Maverick & Dain certainly try hard, but they weren’t built up as credible enough to feel like a real threat here. The last couple of minutes featured some interesting double team stuff, but some of it was executed very slowly. MSK hit Maverick with the Hart Attack Blockbuster for the win at 7:15 (shown of 10:32). After the match, Imperium beats up Dain. I’m not mad about keeping SAnitY from reforming. **¾
The Robert Stone Brand apparently still owes Mercedez Martinez money. Jessi Kamea is meant to be threatening now, and she’s not letting the Brand get stepped to. Then, Roderick Strong & Marina Shafir enter the building all dolled up. Then, we see that after the final match at Takeover, Kyle O’Reilly joined Adam Cole at the hospital because he passed out backstage. Cole kept trash talking as they rolled into the hospital. I like that little bit more than I liked most of their overlong match.
Mercedes Martinez def. Jessi Kamea
Kamea attacked before the bell but this got real squishy for Martinez real fast. She hit the Air Raid Crash for the win at 1:53. After the match she chokes her money out of Robert Stone and then challenges Raquel Gonzalez. ½*
Kushida def. Santos Escobar {NXT Cruiserweight Championship Match}
This was another open challenge from Escobar, trying to put the final nail in the coffin of Jordan Devlin’s claims to the title. Kushida is rocking short trunks for what I presume is the first time in his career. Hey Vic Joseph, saying PK kick is like saying ATM machine or SSN number. It’s redundant. It took these guys a minute but once they hit the gas they really hit the gas. After a roll up exchange, Kushida pinned Escobar deep to win the title at 7:38 (shown of 11:13). This is the first time in a while that I felt a surprise title change coming because it was the exact right time for a surprise title change to come. Kushida had suffered a couple of high-profile losses in great Takeover matches, and a heel had just consolidated his control over this division. A few points for a fun match, and even more for great timing. ***¼
Tommaso Ciampa & Timothy Thatcher are a stronger unit now that WALTER is behind them. How is that? Anyway, they’re coming for MSK. I mean, I want to see that match but that Imperium feud feels completely unfinished. Then, Devlin approaches Kushida and says that a ladder match doesn’t really prove that Escobar was the best cruiserweight, so he’ll be coming back for the title at some point in the future. That actually would have been a cool match to have on a big NXT next month. Oh well, I guess we’ll wait/they’ll forget they set this up.
Gonzalez comes out to celebrate her new title. She talks a bit about how her debut (which was supposed to happen at the first NXT on USA) was delayed because she wasn’t ready, and about how Dakota Kai brought her along and made her the wrestler she is today. There’s some serious babyface energy here. The lights go out and Franky Money and her pup come out. She cuts a promo but I can’t help but focus on the dog. It’s so cute I want to die! Gonzalez threatens to shove the dog up Monet’s ass. I guess not a babyface then. Raw Women’s Champion Rhea Ripley and Smackdown Women’s Champion Bianca Belair comes out for a photo op with the new champ. They’re all WWE Performance Center success stories you see. It’s pretty damned neat, but it feels like something that would have been more appropriate in the pre-Takeover era of this show when bragging about Developmental successes was more of a thing. Plus it makes Monet’s debut feel out of place.
Pete Dunne is after championship gold. He threw a vaporwave threat in Kross’s direction on Twitter the other day, so I assume that’s the direction. There’s no way he beats Kross, but I’m rooting for him. Then, General Manager William Regal hypes Sarray’s debut next week. So do Meiko Satomura and Simon Inoki. Oof, does Inoki work for WWE? Homeboy does not have a great track record in wrestling. Then, Regal accepts Strong’s resignation.
Isaiah Scott def. Leon Ruff
They packed a lot into this match, which isn’t surprising given they did the same with their segment together at Takeover. Ruff’s super Frankensteiner was absolutely insane. He went after Scott’s arm a bunch, the effects of which unfortunately came and went. But aside from this there was plenty of nutty stuff in this. Completely unexpected but a great blow off match for this little feud. Scott hit the JML Driver for the win at 7:34 (shown of 11:05). Scott would be a great first feud for Kushida. They’ve never had a singles match. ***½
Zoey Stark and Martinez get into a little argument in the back. Then, WALTER brags about getting through Ciampa and warns that the rest of Imperium will continue to make a mark on NXT. Then, Ruff attacks Scott backstage. I guess we’ve got one more of these in the tank. I think Scott ought to win the feud, but I’m down with a hardcore match to wrap things up.
Bronson Reed, Dexter Lumis, Shotzi Blackheart & Ember Moon def. Johnny Gargano, Candice LeRae, Indi Hartwell & Austin Theory.
The prevailing story here is that Hartwell is still hot for Lumis. There’s more intergender fighting in this match than you usually get in the now-strict no mixing days of IG wrestling. The finish is played for comedy, as Hartwell tries to bait Lumis into taking her unconscious body to the back. It works and she winks at the camera as her carries her away. Moon hits Theory with a big ol’ Eclipse and then after the entire Way tries and fails to suplex Reed, the big man hits the Tsunami on Theory for the win at 8:04 (shown of 10:35). This was such a weird choice of main event for the first episode in a new timeslot. Personally I’d have put Kushida’s title win here, as a comedy match doesn’t make the show seem as important. I guess with Gargano here this had more star power, but this felt very midcard. **¾