NXT UK 62

September 18, 2019 – Cardiff, Wales

Travis Banks def. Tyson T-Bone
T-Bone got a lot more offense in here than was necessary. That said, the match was decent enough back-and-forth contest and an acceptable way to waste four minutes of your life if you’re so inclined. Banks won in 4:47 with a roll up. **¼ 

Mark Coffey & Wolfgang hijack the missing Toni Storm’s promo time this week. They weren’t pinned in the tag title match in Cardiff, so they’re still coming after the title. This promo style, wherein Coffey talks fast and Wolfgang supports his points, works well for them.  

Rhea Ripley def. Debbie Keitel
Keitel is one of Finn Balor’s students, and Ripley put her down with the Riptide in 1:24. After the match, Ripley laid out a challenge for Kay Lee Ray’s title. She doesn’t mention that she’s simultaneously trying to get Shayna Baszler’s title, which is too bad because it could have been an interesting angle. Jinny and Jazzy Gabert interrupt and I realize that there are a ton of heels in this division. Jinny sends Gabert after Ripley, but Ripley kicks her off the apron. N/A

Trent Seven, unintentionally dressed as a fancy referee, was approached by Noam Dar who tried to bully him with a bullhorn. Bystanders keep the two from fighting. They’ll fight next week. 

Joseph Conners def. Kenny Williams
Why are they putting Conners over other people? Why?! Williams did some cool stuff down the stretch here, like avoiding the ropes when it looked like Conners would knock him off of them. Aside from that there wasn’t a lot to get excited about here because Conners hasn’t magically become more interesting. He won with Don’t Look Down at 5:15. **¼ 

Cesaro praises Ilja Dragunov as a fun opponent who made him happy to come to NXT UK. I’m glad they didn’t just totally drop this once Cesaro left the UK, and I hope that this the beginning of something new for Dragunov. Later, Oliver Carter lets us know he’s coming back next week. Even later, KLR says she isn’t sweating Tegan Nox and her two broken knees. They’ll fight in two weeks in a non-title match. 

Kassius Ohno def. Sid Scala {British Rounds Match}
The rules: Six three-minute rounds. It takes two pin falls, two submissions, one pin fall and one submission, or one knockout to win. A fall ends a round. Being ahead on falls at the end of the sixth round is also a victory. Ohno came into this having wrestled under these rules against the likes of Johnny Saint, Cesaro, and Robbie Brookside in the past (which the commentators bring up and I love them). Scala as far as I can tell never had worked this kind of match before. The first round went by without a fall, and I’m impressed with how engaged they were able to keep the crowd despite spending the three minutes in unexciting holds. Scala got close to getting a pin at the end of the second round, frustrating Ohno into fighting into the break. Ohno scored the first fall with the Knockout Elbow 1:30 into the third round. He’d gained the advantage with a cheap punch earlier in the round. Ohno easily controlled the fourth round. Scala blocked a senton and started regaining momentum in the fifth round but the bell screwed him. Scala came microseconds away from tying the score in the final fall with a backslide, but Ohno beat the count. This structure is really interesting as it keeps the audience very engaged with low-impact action in bursts. I really enjoyed it, and hope we get more of this stipulation in the future. I’m also happy to see this feud continue, as Scala is a great underdog to Ohno. ***¼