William Regal, who has been with NXT since the beginning, admitted that he had lost control of the brand.
Due to the chaos in NXT, he decided he was no longer capable of working as the general manager of the black-and-gold brand.
He was not allowed to compete, and he was not allowed to put his hands on talent unless provoked.
He has solidified himself over the years as one of the greatest general managers in WWE history, and he is far from done.
It is a shame that he will not be allowed to wrestle for a while, but he may still not be cleared to compete.
Prince Pretty got the hot tag that was stopped by a vicious clothesline from Aichner.
Bartel and Aichner have been great at selling sprints, but the split presentation took away from any chance they had to put on their best effort.
The speed and high-flying of Baxter allowed him to send the Japanese Superstar out of the ring repeatedly.
The Japanese Superstar landed a dropkick and enzuigiri to daze Baxter, but the challenger responded with a springboard handspring side kick.
Kushida is one of the best in the business right now, and O’Reilly is not far behind him in NXT.
Ted DiBiase set the stage for LA Knight’s entrance, who put over how good it felt for him to meet his hero.
Off the hot tag, Carter was a ball of fire, dominating Gonzalez and Kai on her own.
Gonzalez and Kai could very well win the NXT Women’s Tag Team Championships after this victory.
Indi Hartwell attacked Shirai from behind, and The Way set up Shirai on the table for an elbow drop.
Shirai clearly has The Way in her sights, but she needed a tag team partner established.
There are so many contenders to The Way, and Shirai and Stark are unlikely to be the ones to dethrone LeRae and Hartwell.