Ilja Dragunov’s road to redemption hit zero speedbumps, as he immediately set his sights back on Carmelo Hayes’ NXT Championship and went on a little win streak to get back to it.
August 22, 2023 – Orlando, Florida
Ilja Dragunov def. Trick Williams
From NXT Heatwave. Williams’ timing was off a bit in the early going, but they got through it and let him show off some interesting ring savvy in the middle. Specifically, when Dragunov was going for machine gun chops in the corner, Williams sat down to avoid them, and then countered both times that Dragunov lifted him up to restart. From there, the match became Dragunov taking all of Williams’ high impact offense and mugging in response to psych out his opponent. That led to Dragunov getting busted open and nearly losing a couple of times, but a couple of well-timed counters eventually led to him hitting a diving elbow smash for the win at 9:15 (shown of 12:48). ***
September 5, 2023 – Orlando, Florida
Ilja Dragunov def. Oro Mensah
From NXT 753. There were a couple of moments that felt very choreographed, where one guy would go for a move despite the other guy being halfway across the ring. Dragunov’s offense lately has lent itself to that kind of goofiness, which I hope he tightens up going forward. The rest of this match was kind of a hoot. Mensah got in some strong offense, but was never able to take control for long because he was more concerned with making fun of Dragunov’s taunts than he was with winning. A shame for him, as Dragunov hit the Torpedo Moscow and ended things at 6:15 (shown of 9:49). **¾
September 12, 2023 – Orlando, Florida
Ilja Dragunov def. Wes Lee {Number One Contender Match}
From NXT 754. Is it intentional that Dragunov’s road back to the title ran through most of the black roster on his way to the black champion? I probably wouldn’t have though anything of it if not for the Mensah match, but that makes it a little weird, right? This was a fun opener. Lee gave Dragunov some competition, though like Mensah and Williams before him, this was built to make Dragunov look inevitable. Lee’s best counters came in the form of a Frankensteiner and a knee kick to block the Torpedo Moscow. But Dragunov hard gnarlier offense, like a German suplex onto the announce table and an elbow to the back of the head to end things at 9:52 (shown of 13:26). ***½
September 30, 2023 – Bakersfield, California
Ilja Dragunov def. Carmelo Hayes {NXT Championship Match}
From NXT No Mercy. The build to this rematch is cool, as the normally boastful Hayes was unsure that he could beat Dragunov in a rematch, as he had the inadvertent help of Williams in winning their first match. There isn’t a ton to differentiate this match and the previous one they had, though the end of this one plays nicely off of the end of that one. Williams isn’t at ringside at all, having promised to help prove he could win with nothing extra, and probably in the midst of celebrating his NXT North American Championship win earlier in the night. Hayes was able to block and counter more of Dragunov’s offense here than in the first match, but Dragunov was just as intense (sometimes bordering on cartoonishly so) and vicious as the first time around. Dragunov bleeds from the action, but doesn’t go down to any of Hayes’s mega match offense. And in the end, Dragunov counters the Nothing But Net to a lariat and hits a diving H Bomb (c’mon, really with that name?) for the win at 21:03, showing that he is just that much more resilient than Hayes in a straight 1-1 contest. Just as good as their first match, even as I start to worry that Dragunov’s Performance Center-induced mannerisms might start to wear on me. ****¼
A short one this time around, but the path back to the title for Dragunov wasn’t long. But who knows how long this title reign will be and how many milestones it will see, so it might be quite a while until this series returns.