NXT Halloween Havoc 2022

Before I get to the show, I’m going to do the same bit I’ve been doing for WWE main roster PPVs and review the best matches from TV since the last NXT PPV. I’m also going to throw in any title changes that have happened on TV. Whereas for the main roster reviews I watch anything that gets a sustained 8.0 or higher from Cagematch users (for two weeks after it airs), I’ll be going 7.9 or higher for NXT because this show needs the handicap.

Road to Halloween Havoc

September 6, 2022 – Orlando, Florida

Meiko Satomura def. Roxanne Perez
From NXT 694. This was awesome, just way too short. It makes me so sad to watch this because Satomura could be the Women’s Champion right now, which would allow her to have longer matches without commercial breaks on PPV specials. Instead, we have Mandy Rose. Most of the match was submission-focused and beautifully done. And then, kind of out of nowhere, Satomura hit a kick to the face and the Scorpio Rising for the win at 7:52 (shown of 11:19). Given that Perez is the one that will get the push, it was surprising to see her on the receiving end of such a one-sided match, but I very much enjoyed it! Perez got Satomura’s respect after the match, but then Cora Jade snuck out and attacked Perez. ***½

September 13, 2022 – Orlando, Florida

Solo Sikoa def. Carmelo Hayes {NXT North American Championship Match}
From NXT 695. This wound up being a massive unforced error. Hayes had been having a very solid second run with the title (after a solid first run with the title). Losing here was baffling in hindsight, as Sikoa was forced to vacate the title shortly after this win because he’d already been called up to Smackdown and he stepped in and took Wes Lee’s title shot here after Lee got attacked and couldn’t compete. It’s just lame. But then, NXT has been lame for a while now. In fact, it’s appropriate that this happened on the one-year anniversary of NXT 2.0, a branding idea that got scuttled just a few weeks after this. The match was fine thanks almost entirely to Hayes flying around the ring like an angry bee to keep the crowd distracted from the fact that Sikoa didn’t do much of anything at all. Trick Williams tried to interfere a few times, but Sikoa fought through it and hit a Superfly Splash for the win at 7:35 (shown of 10:02). **¾

September 20, 2022 – Orlando, Florida

Nathan Frazer def. Axiom
From NXT 696. This is their second match in a best of three series. Axiom won the first, which I didn’t watch because it didn’t meet the threshold. I’m counting on the commentary team to let me in on anything important in this that stems from their other match, but not holding out a lot of hope for it. When this series was announced before Worlds Collide, I thought they were hyping a single 2/3 Falls Match, and I thought that match would pave the way for Noam Dar to come in with the Heritage Cup. I was incorrect. This was good, on par with the kind of match we’d get rather frequently in the glory days of this show. There was a moment toward the end when Axiom countered Frazer doing a seemingly pointless backflip to a roll up that bothered me, but other than that everything in this match was well executed. Frazer put Axiom away with superplex, a neckbreaker, and a Phoenix Splash at 9:42 (shown of 13:14) ***¼

JD McDonagh def. Tyler Bate {Number One Contender Match}
From later in the same night. This was shaping up to be a digest version of their stellar Takeover match, but then they threw in enough little flourishes at the end to give this a bit of identity of its own. The conceit from the beginning of having Breakker’s two most recent defeats fight over the next shot at him seems silly to me, especially in the face of who debuted after the match ended. This paired with Sikoa being stripped of the North American Championship after a week of being allowed to wear and defend it because he wasn’t scheduled for the title match, you’ve got a solid amount of questionable booking of talents people might otherwise care about. Do what you want with Toxic Attraction and Joe Gacy, stop messing with the top titles on the brand. Anyway, this was a lot of fun. Bate tried to finish McDonagh with the Phoenix Splash, but McDonagh ran up and caught him with a headbutt, a Spanish Fly, and the Devlin Side for the win at 12:54. Ilja Dragunov came out and confronted Breakker and McDonagh after the match. Why not just do Dragunov vs. Breakker on the PPV so we can have something fresh? ***¾

October 11, 2022 – Orlando, Florida

Nathan Frazer def. Axiom
From NXT 699. This was the final match in the best of three series and also a qualifying match for the Halloween Havoc ladder match. With this series between these two we got a few really good, fast paced cruiserweight matches that (spoiler alert) led to a good ladder match for a title. You’d be forgiven for thinking this was the TNA X-Division circa 2002/2003. This was very fast-paced and incredibly fun all the way through. I’d love to see the version without the commercial break, because based on a replay it seemed like they kept up the pace during that period and the match could have used a couple more minutes of action. Frazer caught Axiom with a roll up counter to a roll up for the win at  9:23 (shown of 12:53). ***¾

October 22, 2022 – Orlando, Florida

Shotzi & Quincy Elliot are the hosts for the night. I guess Shotzi hosting Halloween Havoc is consistent, but who cares about show hosts on wrestling events? Also, Chucky is back for the opening video. Can anyone confirm that this isn’t Brad Dourif doing the voice? I know he’s still the man behind the character in the Chucky TV show, but this doesn’t really sound like him. 

Wes Lee def. Von Wagner, Carmelo Hayes, Oro Mensah, and Nathan Frazer {NXT North American Championship Ladder Match}
If Lee or Frazer didn’t win here they’d have made a huge mistake, and with a 40% chance of choosing the right person I’m glad they nailed it. I never miss the opportunity to say that I think ladder matches are completely played out, but this one kept me entertained all the way through. It utilized Trick Williams and Mr. Stone’s ringside presence well, and almost even featured an across the board good use of the terrible Wagner. Sadly, he can’t keep it together for a full match and almost hit a woman sitting in the front row in the face with a ladder. And right after that he blatantly got into position for Frazer’s frog splash onto said ladder. That said, the crowd’s vocal fear that Wagner might win the match drove them to loudly cheer for everyone else. There were only one or two bumps that anyone recovered from too quickly, as the spots were generally rapid rather than impactful and dangerous. It felt like a WCW Cruiserweight Division match, plus one out of place giant, rather than one of WWE’s typical absurd ladder match catastrophes. So yeah, I dug it. Lee hit Hayes with a Meteora off of the ladder and then climbed over his limp body to retrieve the belt at 19:19. ****

Apollo Crews def. Grayson Waller
This is Crews‘s first NXT special since ‘15 in London. I’m not saying that this should have been a blindfold match because they’re dumb, but the big event in this feud was Waller temporarily blinding Crews. It had nothing to do with caskets. And with an ambulance match happening later in the show (which is the same gimmick), this is redundant and I hate it. At one point, there’s some confusion because Waller slams Crews through the lid of the casket but the match doesn’t end. I think that makes sense, since closing the lid on top of someone is how the match ends, but this teetering on the brink of logic is the same thing that knocked the Gunther vs. Sheamus rematch down a bit. Just stop doing things that could confuse the audience. Then, the lights go out and a bunch of druids bring out another casket. What the hell? Why does Crews have a druid connection? Just let them wrestle a match! They start working towards the finish, with a bunch of lid closing teases. I hate this stipulation because the closing the lid and blocking the lid bit can really only be dramatic once. It becomes repetitive and boring after that. And that happens here (and will likely happen later in the ambulance match). Eventually Crews hits a spinebuster into the casket and closes the lid at 12:58. Aggressively medium stuff with a dash of stupid. **¾ 

Andre Chase berates his class because they don’t know where Halloween Havoc 1995 took place. Also, Duke Hudson has transferred into the class. And he knows his WCW history better than Bodhi Hayward. Anyone else getting porno vibes from the acting here? Then, Pretty Deadly says they’re ready to defend the tag titles on Tuesday. The KCs take offense at PD’s claim to be the best tag team in NXT. I guess the women’s tag belts are on the line on Tuesday as well. 

Roxanne Perez def. Cora Jade {Weapons Wild Match}
Guessing that this is just a no disqualification stipulation dressed up as something Halloweeny. YOU DICKS! Most of the match was slow and boring, though there were a couple of decent spots in there. The swings into the barricade and the trash can stomp were solid. But nothing Jade does is convincing, and Perez’s performances against her are always worse than those against anyone else. This match was no exception. They fight up to that balcony that Vince McMahon jumped off of because Rob Gronkowski was being a baby about taking a big bump, and then they both fall backwards off of it in a spot that looked crazy stupid. Remember when NXT specials used to have matches like Candice LeRae vs Io Shirai on them? We’re a million miles away from that now. Perez hits Pop Rocks on a pile of chairs for the win at 12:26. Hopefully that’s the end of Jade on the big shows for a while. She doesn’t have it. *¾ 

Lash Legend comes out to complain about the hosts in a segment that feels like an eternity. Quincy Elliot is pretty good on the mic though. The bit ends with Legend eating Shotzi’s DDT, which leads to a match between them on Tuesday. Nothing like using PPVs to hype TV. Then, Schism says they’ll reveal their masked ally’s identity on Tuesday. 

Julius Creed def. Damon Kemp {Ambulance Match}
If Kemp wins, Brutus Creed is out of NXT. This and a Casket Match being on the same show is so dumb; it’s the same stipulation. Creed pegs Kemp in the head with a pumpkin before the bell, giving me hope that the match will have an intense energy. After a bit of brawling, Kemp throws a pumpkin and I’m disappointed to see they’re little more than dodgeballs. Anyway, they keep up a decent pace throughout the match, though it starts to get repetitive after a while. I don’t understand the logic of Creed’s fingers getting repeatedly smashed in the ambulance door only for him to show no issues using his hands afterwards. He powerbombs Kemp on a stretcher and then loads him into the ambulance for the win at 14:09. I guess this was fine given the inexperience of both guys. Certainly better than the match before it. ***

Mandy Rose def. Alba Fyre {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
This was preceded by a very long, very terrible cinematic haunted house segment that say Fyre torment Toxic Attraction and then shove Rose in a car. The only character work done was Jacy Jayne & Gigi Dolan not getting along because they feel differently about spooky season. I bet that goes nowhere. After driving all over town, the match finally starts back in the ring. Of course, all the driving meant nothing as they basically start from scratch at the opening bell. The match was going along fine, if unspectacularly, when Toxic Attraction interfered and helped Rose hit the running knee for the win at 7:07. Who do they think like these lame tropes? They’re so boring. Given they spent so much airtime with backstage garbage and then saddling the actual match with so little time and a crap finish, it’s no wonder these two wrestled as if they didn’t really care. **¼ 

The challengers for the tag titles are interviewed. There are a lot of jokes to be made about the outing that Edris Enofe & Malik Blade would have with Zoey Stark & Nikkita Lyons, but I’m too annoyed with this show to make any. 

Bron Breakker def. Ilja Dragunov and JD McDonagh {NXT Championship Triple Threat Match}
I can’t remember if I’ve heard this version of Dragunov’s music before, but I went from hating it to enjoying it during his entrance. They played up Breakker’s triple threat loss to Dolph Ziggler enough that I’m convinced he won’t lose here. But if he loses, it makes McDonagh’s presence in the match baffling. Just give me the fresh Breakker vs. Dragunov match. My only complaint about this match is that I wish McDonagh’s cheerleading for Dragunov and Breakker to beat each other up could have lasted longer undetected before he got attacked by both opponents for it. Everything else was terrific, and McDonagh in particular showed that his character can permeate his in-ring persona insanely well. Dragunov fought like a monster. And as usual, Breakker showed that when put up against good opponents, he steps up and meets them to have a dope match. This exceeded my expectations quite a bit. Breakker blocked Dragunov’s Torpedo Moskau (I can’t believe they still call it that) with a spear for the win at 23:47. ****¼ 

Shawn Michaels has said that he wants Halloween Havoc to be NXT’s equivalent to SummerSlam as the second most important show of the year. Maybe next year don’t treat it like an episode of PeeWee’s Playhouse with all the goofy crap if you want the audience to see it that way. Book the whole show with the care you gave to the opener and main event.