NXT 141

October 31, 2012 – Winter Park, Florida

Jimmy Uso & Jey Uso def. Johnny Curtis & Michael McGillicutty
There was a cute story here, with McGillicutty getting frustrated with Curtis’s goofy antics, essentially going it alone and then being defeated. And then the Ascension taunts them from the balcony. The commentators say that the rivalry is nowhere near over, but it feels like they should have a blowoff match very soon. **¾

Leo Kruger def. Xavier Woods
I feel like a broken record, but NXT’s emphasis on this Kruger character is really bad judgment. As we now know, Woods, who performed well here, got the better deal in the end. **

Vicky Guerrero interrupts a rambling Big E Langston promo to recruit him into her stable. He blows her off with some lifting powder to the face. That’s a pretty unconventional babyface turn.

Jinder Mahal comes out to demand a rightful rematch with the NXT Champion. I’m pretty sure that’s only the case if you were the actual champion when you lost your championship match. He’s interrupted by Justin Gabriel who thinks he’s more deserving of the title. Mahal points out the Gabriel was knocked out of the Gold Rush tournament in round one. Drew McIntyre jumps in the mix on the grounds that he’s pinned Rollins (though Rollins beat him a couple weeks later to knock him out of the Gold Rush tournament). Bo Dallas wants a shot too, saying the rest of them have had their chance, though he too had a shot in Gold Rush and went out in round one and is basically no more deserving than anyone else in the ring. So of course a 4 way number one contender’s match is made by Dusty Rhodes.

This is what I don’t understand about NXT logic: you have guys like Langston and Kruger who are undefeated or at least win every match, usually in under 3 minutes. Aren’t they more deserving of a title shot? The actual contenders aren’t booked as strongly as the guys squashing geeks every week.

Roman Reigns def. CJ Parker
Here’s where it all began. The commentators make a big deal about all the build to Roman Reigns debut… but there was none of that on this show. Reigns sure did a lot of clubbering here. Not much else though. The commentators talked Reigns up in a way that suggests that everything we’ve seen was written even back then, so much so that Regal actually calls himself out for being so transparent about it. *

Antonio Cesaro def. Tyson Kidd [WWE United States Championship Match]
It’s possible that my rating for this match is colored by the fact that I was starving for something special out of NXT, but this fully delivered. Is it a bummer that the best NXT match since the reboot comes via two wrestlers who are on the main roster fighting over a main roster title? A little, but it was still great and let Kidd perform as well as I’ve ever seen him. ****