March 8, 2022 – Orlando, Florida
Raquel Gonzalez & Cora Jade def. Dakota Kai & Wendy Choo {Semifinal Match}
It’s a battle of the inaugural winners of the Women’s Dusty Classic! Vic Joseph on commentary panders to a young audience that doesn’t watch this show by calling out the wheels vs. doors meme that less than 10 people actually watching this show understood. What is wrong with him? Speaking of things that are wrong, Kai’s deranged character made me cringe so hard my body hurt. Choo’s shtick is lame too, but in an eyeroll sort of way and not a muscle cramp sort of way. This got a lot of time, and was mostly okay if a little awkward at times. Toxic Attractions attack on Gonzalez felt like something the referee would have definitely noticed. From there, Kai showed the beginning of a babyface turn, or at least one of her personalities is turning babyface. Another isn’t, and that heel persona hit the weakened Gonzalez with a big boot. Choo hit a Vader Bomb and Kai hit a diving double stomp for the win at 10:43 (shown). **¾
In the back, someone has attacked the Creed brothers. They look more like they have bad stomach aches than that someone injured them. Whoever coached them on that sell job is bad and should feel bad. And nothing says dominant tag team like getting beat up in the back to the point of not being able to compete.
Fallon Henley def. Tiffany Stratton
Last I saw, Henley was a bartender and friend of the JBBJ team. Wade Barrett responds to Joseph’s wheels vs. doors question from earlier in the show. Stop, please. If they start bringing up Lance vs. Chelsea I’m going to quit watching wrestling. After a perfectly decent performance from Stratton, smoke appears on the ramp and distracts the referee. Sarray’s competitive alter ego attacks Stratton (her schoolgirl persona had been spying on Stratton backstage) and Henley hits a running knee for the win at 2:48. The hillbillies celebrate with Henley after the match. **
Andre Chase accosts his classroom, with the exception of the devoted Bodhi Hayward. Then, Carmelo Hayes and Trick Williams talk trash in the barbershop. He reaffirms that he’ll defend the title in a ladder match at Stand & Deliver against four opponents. That means qualification matches. Then, on Lashing Out with Lash Legend, Nikitta Lyons is the guest star. Legend calls Lyons’ mom a groupie and Lyons a thot. This is all very Florida. Then, Imperium claims they had nothing to do with the attack on the Creeds. MSK walks up and demands the spot, promising to give the Creeds a title shot when they’re well. Then, the hillbillies accuse Legado del Fantasma of attacking the Creeds because they have a history of parking lot attacks. I don’t hate the nod to continuity. Legado says they’d admit if it were them, and then Elektra Lopez rags on Brooks Jensen for his life in the friendzone.
Grayson Waller def. LA Knight {Last Man Standing Match}
This feud has been dragging on for like five months. This feud-ending match is so important that McKenzie Mitchell does a voiceover to announce that MSK is getting the tag title shot tonight. This show is bad. Knight drops Waller off of a balcony, but Waller is fine. This show is bad. Sanga carries Waller to the ring, so maybe he caught him, which would be less bad, but the commentators don’t suggest that. Knight handcuffs Sanga to the post to stop him from interfering more. After taking half a dozen chair shots, Waller completely recovers, hits Knight with a blackjack, and then hits a diving elbowdrop through the announce table for the win at 12:30 (shown of 16:01). This was as vanilla a brawl as you’re ever going to see, with no one selling anything and nothing feeling like it had any impact. I can’t remember if I’ve seen Sanga before. He may have shown up on the last NXT show I reviewed, but I honestly have no idea. **½
Tony D’Angelo tells a nonsensical story about helping his cousin scam some guy out of restaurant money (as if that’s a thing that exists in 2022) and says he’s going to have the same kind of success in NXT. Later, Indi Hartwell is still skeptical of the space Duke Hudson takes up in Persia Pirotta’s life. They’ll be fighting soon. Then, Stratton says she wants a match against Sarray next week.
Kay Lee Ray & Io Shirai def. Kacy Catanzaro & Kayden Carter {Semifinal Match}
Edris Enofe & Malik Blade took out Mandy Rose’s manservants so that they could be her manservants. I truly don’t care where that’s going and I feel weird about watching a show where the black tag team is dying to work for free for the white lady. Joseph and Barrett argue over who is the bigger beta. This show is bad. But this match was good. The KCs couldn’t get through it without a couple slightly awkward moments, but by and large this was hard fought and entertaining. KLR hits Catanzaro with a superkick and the Gory Bomb, and Shirai followed that with the moonsault for the win at 8:01 (shown). Jade attacks Rose in her booth after the match. ***¼
Fabian Aichner & Marcel Barthel nc. Wes Carter & Nash Lee {NXT Tag Team Championship Match}
This was more than decent, which comes as no surprise as all four of these guys are pros. But it did feel like they were holding back a bit. It became clear why at 5:34, when the Creeds ran out to attack and get the match thrown out. If they’re well enough to do that they’re well enough to wrestle. This show is bad. **½
Draco Anthony and Harlan have a staredown in the weight room. Joe Gacy tells Anthony to relax. Xyon Quinn shows up and tells Anthony not to be brainwashed by Gacy. Quinn should not be cutting promos. Then, they announce A-Kid is coming to NXT. Ikemen Jiro is stoked, but Kushida thinks he’s better than A-Kid. I’ll be checking in on that match whether or not it’s on Stand & Deliver. Speaking of matches I’ve wanted to watch no matter what, here are a couple of WWE matches I watched between Vengeance Day and this show.
Dolph Ziggler def. Bron Breakker & Tommaso Ciampa {NXT Championship Triple Threat Match}
Remember back at Halloween Havoc when Breakker screwed up that bulldog spot, and it wasn’t that big of a deal because it was woven into the story of the match by virtue of Breakker being inexperienced? Well he has a botch in this match worthy of his Uncle Scott, where he falls to the mat because he realized too late that he jumped the gun on his cue to hit a spear. It looked really silly. Some in the crowd chanted, “You fucked up,” while others shushed them and the production team tried to pipe in enough noise to cover it up. Woof. Aside from that, this was a mad dash of a triple threat, fun all the way through but not amounting to much outside of the shocking finale. Truth is, this is the most surprising title change at least since Ciampa won it the first time on NXT TV, and probably ever. We’ll see where they go with this, though I imagine the only satisfying move is to have Gunter obliterate ZIggler at Stand & Deliver. Bobby Roode interfered a bunch near the end, eventually getting Breakker out of the way so Ziggler could hit Ciampa with a superkick for the win and the title at 9:56 (shown of 12:24). ***¼