Look at that, both of the guys I’m tracking have a dragon nickname. How fun. And since I’m caught up on Takagi matches until he’s done with the G1, I’m checking back in on this dragon.
With Ilja Dragunov injured, Tyler Bate won a tournament to be the NXT UK Champion in the final episode of NXT UK TV. Three days later, Bate lost the title to Bron Breakker, who unified it with the NXT Championship. Two weeks after that, Ilja Dragunov popped up on NXT TV. He beat Xyon Quinn in a squash debut, and then had a very brief program with Grayson Waller to show his dominance. From there, all that was left was to go for what remained of the title he never lost. But he wouldn’t just have to face the current champion, he’d also have to dispatch the man he banished from NXT UK.
October 22, 2022 – Orlando, Florida
Bron Breakker def. Ilja Dragunov and JD McDonagh {NXT Championship Triple Threat Match}
From NXT Halloween Havoc. 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
October 25, 2022 – Orlando, Florida
JD McDonagh def. Ilja Dragunov
From NXT 702. I guess McDonagh was still mad at Dragunov, both for dropping the fall in the title match and for getting him booted out of NXT UK. So this. Dragunov’s ribs were jacked up because of the Halloween Havoc match, and that made him very vulnerable in the early part of the match, and also made him unable to hit his high impact offense. These guys hit each other real hard and made Dragunov’s injury (and intensity in the face of the injury) compelling throughout this short main event. Dragunov collapsed when setting up the Torpedo Moscow, but then went for it anyway despite McDonagh clearly seeing it coming. McDonagh countered to the Twister (his Anaconda Vice variation, not to be confused with Masaaki Mochizuki’s spinning brainbuster) and Dragunov passed out at 10:02 (shown of 13:31). I wish this had gotten more time, because these two could have a good match in their sleep and I want to see more of it. ***
Dragunov sold the injury and disappeared from TV for four months after this, because NXT TV is super weird now and they tend to do this with the NXT UK remnants no matter how over they are. In February, Dragunov came back and picked up right where he left off, feuding with McDonagh. He beat Trick Williams while McDonagh was on commentary to hype the rematch.
March 21, 2023 – Orlando, Florida
Ilja Dragunov nc. JD McDonagh
From NXT 725. Dragon Lee was watching the match from ringside, scouting two guys who he thought might take him up on an open challenge he’d put out. This match was efficiently violent. They beat the ever loving piss out of each other in a rather narrow window given to them. The finish was sadly lame, as they conveniently ducked out of the ring close to where Lee was sitting and fought into his lap. That led to Lee attacking them and the match getting thrown out at 10:09 (shown of 14:37). Wes Lee joined the fight, leading to these four guys fighting for Wes Lee’s NXT North American Championship a couple weeks later at Stand & Deliver. Axiom earned a spot in that match later. Anyway, this was amazing with an awful finish. ***¾
April 1, 2023 – Los Angeles, California
Wes Lee def. Ilja Dragunov, JD McDonagh, Dragon Lee, and Axiom {NXT North American Championship Five Way Match}
From NXT Stand & Deliver. This was Dragon Lee’s debut with the company. This match had the main drawback than any multi-man, everyone-is-legal-at-once match is going to have, which is that when guys weren’t involved in principal action, they disappeared and laid around at ringside rather than fighting one another there. That aside (though not to say that it was easy to ignore), there were a few interesting stories that were told well here. Dragunov and McDonagh’s simmering hatred was present, as was that masked men’s desire to out-fly each other, as well as the champ’s attempt to run the gauntlet and show he could get one over on all of his opponents. There were a few very cool spots involving all five men as the match started to reach its peak, which helped me to forgive some of the vanishing acts early on. The finish was pretty sick too, as Wes allowed the champ to hit Dragon with the Torpedo Moscow, but timed the Cardiac Kick to hit Dragunov at the same time, allowing him to retain the title at 19:17. Rarely does a spotfest disappoint me at first and then win me over, but this did just that. ****
May 28, 2023 – Lowell, Massachusetts
Ilja Dragunov def. Dijak {Last Man Standing Match}
From NXT Battleground. Dragunov had beaten Dijak by disqualification when Dijak used a chair. The big man beat Dragunov up a whole bunch after that match, leading to this. There was plenty of quality violence to be had here, though I think some odd pacing kept this in very good territory and not all time classic territory. The thing that makes what Dragunov does special is that he’s always moving. If he’s on offense, he’s always frantically angling to find an opening to attack. If he’s not in control, he’s always writhing around the ring selling, while often (and especially in this match) trying to get himself into a position that will make it hard for his opponent to capitalize. Here, it meant he’d flail around so as to hang himself in the ropes so the referee couldn’t count him down on the mat. That’s good stuff. But when the match was at its most intense, the transition from Dragunov’s offense to Dijak’s was a bit awkward. It’s hard to complain too much though, especially when the finish saw Dragunov jump off the steel steps to elbow Dijak’s face into a chair and get the win at 15:54. ****
July 11, 2023 – Orlando, Florida
Ilja Dragunov def. Bron Breakker {Number One Contender Match}
From NXT 744. For a TV match in the middle of the show, this was quite good. While a bit more basic than it might have been had the match happened at the Great American Bash (like I thought it would, and then seen Dragunov win the title at Heatwave), they still whipped the crowd into a frenzy by the end. I’m starting to worry that Dragunov’s selling is starting to rival that of Shawn Michaels at SummerSlam 2005. Hopefully he’ll dial it back against Carmelo Hayes at the GAB, since Hayes isn’t doing the power move shtick that Breakker does. I wish this had gotten a bit more time too, as Breakker falling to a single Torpedo Moscow to the back didn’t seem like enough given all the big stuff we’ve seen him kick out of in the past. But that’s what happened at 10:48 (shown of 14:21), after a solid escalation in the action. ***½
July 30, 2023 – Cedar Park, Texas
Ilja Dragunov def. Carmelo Hayes {NXT Championship Match}
From NXT Great American Bash. At various points throughout the match, I was distracted by how long Dragunov would pause before hitting one of his spinning chops. It made Hayes looks like a deer in headlights. For his part, Hayes moved very quickly when he’d get back on offense. And most of the match was filled with gnarly, high impact action. Hayes also hit a Torbellino that I was confident broke Dragunov’s nose, but there was no blood. Things escalated delightfully from there, from Hayes blocking a coast to coast dropkick with a Codebreaker, to Dragunov catching Hayes midair and hitting a powerbomb. I was worried they weren’t going to click at first, but by the end they put on a terrific main event. Trick Williams caught a wild Torpedo Moscow, which gave a Hayes an opening to hit Nothing But Net for the win at 24:07. I don’t love the finish, but I don’t hate it to death. The Vegas odds has Hayes as the favorite to win here, so I guess I can’t be shocked that Dragunov didn’t win; but I wanted Dragunov to win. Maybe at No Mercy. ****