Stipulation match set for next WWE NXT

Three matches are set for this Tuesday.

Myles Borne will meet Lexis King in a blindfold match on the next episode of NXT. Ava was talking to King following an angle that took place last Tuesday where King sprayed Borne with mace, blinding him in the process. King told Ava that he was doing Borne a favor as he loves playing the sympathy card. Ava says she should suspend him for blinding Borne, but he instead insisted on a match, announcing that the two will wrestle in a blindfold match.

Meanwhile, a six-woman tag team match was also added to Tuesday’s show. As Jacy Jayne was reeling from her TNA Knockouts title loss with Fatal Influence, Lola Vice confronted Jacy, pointing out she was the next contender for the NXT Women’s Championship. Zaria and Sol Ruca came out and the six argued, setting up their match Tuesday.

A tag team match is also set as Wren Sinclair and a mystery partner will take on Izzi Dame and Tatum Paxley of The Culling.

Here is the updated card for NXT:

WWE NXT (August 26, 2025):

  • Blindfold match: Myles Borne vs. Lexis King
  • Jacy Jayne, Jazmyn Nyx, and Fallon Henley vs. Lola Vice, Sol Ruca, and Zaria
  • The Culling (Tatum Paxley & Izzi Dame) vs. Wren Sinclair and ???

Bloodsport XII live results: Josh Barnett vs. MVP, WWE NXT wrestlers compete

On another busy wrestling weekend, the unique format of Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport returns for a 12th edition, headlined by the namesake taking on MVP.

It will be the current AEW manager’s first action since July 2022 when he was still in WWE. Barnett is 2-1 in Bloodsport his year and is coming off a victory over Bad Dude Tito in July.

WWE NXT will be represented as Charlie Dempsey returns for action against Akira, Myles Borne battles Royce Isaacs, and Karmen Petrovic goes one-on-one with Sumie Sakai.

In a clash of former TNA champions, former World Champion Josh Alexander battles past rival and former X-Division titleholder “Speedball” Mike Bailey.

TNA Knockouts Champion Masha Slamovich will battle fellow roster member Lei Ying Lee while another TNA star — Jody Threat — battles Death Riders enforcer Marina Shafir.

In a clash of tag team partners, Kevin Ku and Dominic Garrini of Violence is Forever.

**********

According to Dave Meltzer’s Daily Update, Akira will be off today’s Bloodsport XII show with an injury that he suffered last night in Illinois. Tracey Williams has been announced as Akira’s replacement; Williams will now take on Charlie Dempsey instead.

Big “BLOOD-SPORT!” chant from the crowd at the top of the show. The ring announcer ran down Bloodsport rules before each of tonight’s wrestlers walked out to the ring, one by one. And we got one more “BLOOD-SPORT!” chant after everyone on the card was announced and lined up in the ring.

Lou Nixon (1–1) defeated Calvin Tankman (2–4) via TKO

The crowd gave Tankman a “WELCOME BACK!” and a “TANKMAN!” chant.

Right out of the gate, Tankman leveled Nixon with a massive Avalanche that sent the Brit out of the ropeless ring. Nixon was back in the ring quickly trading kicks and palm strikes with the larger Tankman.

Tankman slammed Nixon to the mat before Nixon locked Tankman in an ankle lock. Tankman punched his way out of the hold.

Nixon later caught Tankman with a running elbow that he followed up with a few stomps for the TKO win. Nixon picks up his first-ever win in Bloodsport.

David Modzmanashvili (1–0) defeated Matt Makowski (2–4) via TKO

Modzmanashvili, who made his Bloodsport debut tonight, walked out to the Georgian national anthem. The announcers said he was previously in the Olympics wrestling for Uzbekistan. He’s a massive human being.

Early in this Modzmanashvili landed an explosive double-leg takedown on Makowski that woke the crowd up. Makowski was able to move into a triangle choke attempt before Modzmanashvili muscled out of Makowski’s guard as he went for an ankle hold. Makowski laid in a few shots to Modzmanashvili’s head.

Modzmanashvili would later launch Makowski with a German suplex that left Makowski outside of the ring. The crowd let out a “HO-LY SH**!” chant and the moment was even replayed on the broadcast.

Whenever Makowski had Modzmanashvili on the ropes, the crowd started to boo. They fell in love with this guy by the end of the match, which Modzmanashvili won with a massive Vader-like power bomb. The ref called for the TKO finish.

The crowd would then chant “PLEASE COME BACK!” and “DA-VID!” afterwards (because good luck on trying to chant his surname). Modzmanashvili is victorious in his Bloodsport debut and left a dent in the mind’s of all who watched him today. A star is born, ladies & gentlemen.

Karmen Petrovic (1–0) defeated Sumie Sakai (1–1) via TKO

Petrovic is a Bosnian-born karate champion who now works for WWE. Sakai has only participated in one Bloodsport event but has been on the scene since 1997, and has become one of the most respected figures on the US independent scene in the past decade or more.

Petrovic is tall and flashy and demonstrated her distinct style of striking up front, albeit struggling to connect with some of the roundhouse kicks she was throwing. Sakai would take her down in the first minute or so with a basic headlock takedown to kesa gatame hold.

Petrovic did the inverted enzuigiri kick to Sakai, the one similar to RVD’s famous spot. She’d get into top mount position and threw a few palm strikes before Sakai reversed control. Sakai dominated on the mat and in any grappling scenario these two got into.

Back on their feet, Petrovic would catch Sakai with a roundhouse to the head, finally, and followed with a nice back suplex. This didn’t phase Sakai, though, who’d keep attacking with a juji gatame arm-breaker hold. She couldn’t cinch it in, so Sakai rolled Petrovic and tried finishing her off with a LeBell Lock submission, but Petrovic slipped out, quickly, first with a kick to the back of the head before a basement-style Trouble in Paradise for the TKO win. This was good.

Dominic Garrini (2–0) defeated Kevin Ku (0–1) via submission

These two are tag team partners under the name Violence Is Forever. This was Ku’s first time in Bloodsport, while Garrini appeared on one of the early Bloodsport events.

Garrini immediately tried diving in with an X guard aiming to take Ku’s back but Ku wouldn’t give it up. Garrini quickly locked Ku in a straight ankle lock, taking Ku to the mat. He shifted to a heel hook while Ku tried one of his own. The two began trading slaps on the mat, then back up on their feet. Garrini would start chopping Ku down with kicks before Ku caught with a dragon screw legwhip.

Late in this one, Ku charged at at Garrini in the corner, but Garrini caught Ku with a power bomb—it was as though Ku was going to jump Garrini into his guard, I guess, or maybe do a shining wizard, I don’t know—but Garrini power bombed Ku, then locked him in a twister for the immediate tap. The crowd liked this.

Charlie Dempsey defeated Tracey Williams via submission

This was excellent.

Fast grappling between these two at the top of this. Williams had less than 12 hours notice before this match. He and Dempsey are coincidentally a perfect match for each other, for some reason. I think it’s a mixture of wrestling style plus body type or size. The crowd sounded split 50–50 between both guys.

It never felt like either wrestler could gain the upper hand, that’s how evenly matched it was. At one point Williams used a Mongolian chop to break Dempsey’s guard. Dempsey went for the inverted Muta lock/cravat until Williams slammed his way out of it. Dempsey landed a number of European uppercuts and elbows; Williams laid in hard strikes of his own. Dempsey kept going for footlocks and facelocks but Williams had an answer for everything. He made great use of the cravat throughout the match.

Williams went for an STF on the edge of the ring but Dempsey slid out of that and later put Williams down with a side gutwrench suplex.

Dempsey fought hard for the double-arm suplex and finally connected with it, then rolled through and locked in a Fujiwara armbar that Williams reversed, which forced Dempsey to move to an ankle lock attempt before Dempsey would finally deadlift Williams with a German suplex; Williams answered that with an HBK-style teardrop suplex on Dempsey.

Dempsey landed another gutwrench suplex, but Williams was quickly back in the game, locking Dempsey in an STF in the middle of the ring before Dempsey escaped, then threw Williams in a Fujiwara armbar for the tap. The crowd gave them a “BLOOD-SPORT!” chant afterwards. Again, this was really good.

Marina Shafir (6–0) defeated Jody Threat (0–2)

Threat came to the ring with serious fire. Both she and Shafir have prior MMA experience in addition to pro wrestling.

Shafir came to the ring with Jon Moxley. The crowd was super happy with his surprise appearance.

These two were great on their feet together, good grappling between these two at the beginning of this. Threat was able to throw Shafir with a single-arm suplex early on, but Shafir would then keep Threat neutralized on the mat.

Shafir would later execute what looked to be what I’ll call a surfboard-slam, and it looked wild.

I enjoyed some of the subtle genius in some of the spots in this. I loved when Shafir couldn’t wheelbarrow suplex Threat, so instead, she spun Threat to the side, creating something more akin to a dumping throw. Then, when Shafir had an inverted triangle locked on Threat, Threat would stand up, clutch Shafir’s head and do a “Kryptonite Krunch” a la Nova in ECW, but presented in the most logical and least-intelligence-insulting way as possible.

Shafir landed hard palm strikes to Threat’s ribs while she tried fighting out of Threat’s guard. Threat was able to take Shafir’s back which seemed to impress Shafir, who was smiling as Threat attempted to choke her.

Five minutes had passed when Shafir really began to dominate—right before Threat exploded, throwing Shafir to the floor, then diving on her from the ring into the crowd.

Threat would later catch Shafir with a German suplex; Shafir answered that with a seoi nage throw before powerslamming Threat and getting her to submit to Mother’s Milk, her forward-facing choke sleeper submission. This was good and I don’t think I’m alone in wanting for a rematch. Marina Shafir is still undefeated in Bloodsport competition.

Masha Slamovich (3–3) defeated Lei Ying Lee (0–1) via TKO

Slamovich got on the mic before the match and said this was going to be for her TNA Knockouts Women’s Championship.

FYI Lee is formerly known Xia Li of WWE and this was her Bloodsport debut.

They were tentative to start with. Slamovich would invite Lee to the mat by sitting in seated open guard, but Lee would manage to gain top position quickly. Slamovich rolled to the floor and broke Lee’s leverage.

The crowd sounded split between the two wrestlers in this. Lee was able to stay on top but Slamovich wouldn’t give up position, continuing to attack Lee’s ankles and feet.

Slamovich landed a Northern Lights suplex and rolled through with an armbar. Lee would later land a release Fisherman’s Buster, then rolled into mounted position and unleashed a flurry of strikes. She’d then catch Slamovich’s kick and turned that into an STF hold. Lightening quick.

Slamovich was quickly out of the hold and had a sleeper on Lee before spiking lee with an awesome head-and-arm suplex. Lee would answer back with a fall-away slam-into standing attack.

Moments later, Slamovich would catch Lee’s kick attempt, then landed a big knee to Lee’s face before pouncing on her with ground-and-pound before the ref called for the bell. Nice match with a ‘realistic’ finish. Verisimilitude! Slamovich now has an even Bloodsport record.

Royce Isaacs (4–5) defeated Myles Borne (0–1) via submission

Bloodsport stalwart, one half of the West Coast Wrecking Crew Mr. Royce Isaacs is coming off a hot win over Charlie Dempsey at the last Bloodsport event in July. Dempsey was at ringside for this bout in Borne’s corner.

Borne is another young WWE NXT guy. He and Isaacs jockeyed for position in the beginning of this, and no one seemed to really have the upper hand. The pace of this match and the Slamovich vs. Lee match are noticeably more deliberate and methodical, and seemingly more “even,” so to speak.

Isaacs had Borne locked in kesa gatame hold while he teed off on Borne’s head with strikes until Borne escape with an ankle lock attempt that he’d turn into top control, somehow, sneakily.

At the five-minute mark, Isaacs had Borne locked in an arm-triangle flat on the mat, but Borne was eventually able to slide out.

Moments later, Isaacs launched Borne with an exploder suplex before locking in a back kneebar. Back on their feet, the two traded elbows before Borne threw Isaacs with a front suplex and then locked on a rear-naked choke before getting slammed back-first into the mat, Isaacs breaking the hold. He followed up with a deadlift German suplex before pummelling Borne with elbows, then locking in a modified STF. He’d then move into a side headlock before Borne countered and back suplexed Isaacs to the mat before trying to submit Isaacs himself. Isaacs responded with a big Samoan Drop style throw before choking Borne out. Isaacs is on a Bloodsport roll, knocking out WWE’s Myles Borne as Charlie Dempsey watched at ringside.

Josh Alexander (1–1) defeated “Speedball” Mike Bailey (1–4) via submission

Really good match between the two Canadians in the semi-main event. Neither could connect with anything until Alexander finally caught one of Speedball’s kicks, then slammed him hard to the mat. As they grappled toward the edge of the ring, Bailey protected himself and went for a possible triangle choke as he held Alexander in his guard, before Alexander broke the hold by shrugging Bailey off of him and out of the ring.

Alexander would again be in top position in Bailey’s guard as he went for a few submission attacks. Alexander used his power to counter much of Bailey’s grappling and mat offense.

Bailey locked Alexander in a headscissors, but Alexander quickly rolled out of that before rolling forward with a waistlock flowing right into back control. Yet another “SPEED-BALL!” chant broke out at this point.

Speedball opened up with his palm strikes when the five-minute call sounded. It still felt like there was a stalemate between these two with neither gaining leverage over the other. The crowd sounded mostly split, too.

Bailey delivered a rolling savate kick to the stomach before a few knees and a giant German suplex into a rear-naked choke. Well done. Alexander broke the hold and again muscled out of the hold, standing up with Speedball still attached to his back. This did not break the hold, though, as Bailey stayed locked to Alexander’s waist.

Alexander fought into Bailey’s guard position and tried peppering him with hard shots, which would eventually lead Alexander to launching Bailey with a German suplex of his own that would actually put Bailey onto the floor.

Speedball came back into the ring and exploded with tae kwon do kicks before they went back to the floor where Alexander slammed Speedball with a German suplex onto the hardwood floor.

Back in the ring, Bailey launched into another flurry of kicks including a high roundhouse to the head. Alexander then whipped his headgear off (!) and the two got back into wild fisticuffs as the crowd erupted. Speedball went for a triangle choke, suddenly, but Alexander reversed that into a power bomb-backbreaker before tapping Speedball with an ankle lock for the win. Fantastic finish. Fans in the front row were slamming their hands on the mat and the place broke out into a “THAT WAS AWESOME!” chant. The two shook hands afterwards.

Josh Barnett (7–1–1) defeated MVP (0–1) via submission

Former WWE and NJPW superstar MVP made his Bloodsport debut here. He’s now a BJJ black belt under Gracie Barra. He sounded to have a lot of fans in the crowd for him at this.

The match had a 20-minute time limit compared with the regular 15-minute limit that regular Bloodsport matches have.

The two went back and forth for the first five minutes or so. MVP is a natural at the “Bloodsport style.” A few minutes into the match, he had Barnett in a straight ankle lock, but Barnett was able to spin out and escape.

Barnett teased MVP and did MVP’s basketball shot gesture, and the story was this pissed MVP off so they got into more of a fistfight from here, with MVP throwing some body shots while Barnett hammered down elbows.

MVP had good top control over Barnett as he worked the top wristlock, but Barnett was able to roll through and break the hold. MVP was able to throw Barnett with a double-underhook suplex before attacking his legs again with the straight ankle lock. Barnett fought back with ankle attacks of his own, and the two pummeled for control in 50/50 position for a while.

Barnett would break MVP’s standing headlock control with his own double-wristlock control. MVP countered that. MVP threw a few haymakers and elbows before taking Barnett to the mat with a big shot.

He and Barnett traded top position and ground-and-pound attempts, back and forth. Barnett dragged MVP to the middle of the ring and cinched in a half-crab before transitioning to a bully choke and then a rear-naked choke which made MVP pass out; the ref called for the bell and the TKO finish. MVP choked the ref when he woke up, thinking he was still in the fight.

This was really good and nostalgic in a way if you’re a fan of older New Japan. This was exactly the type of match these two would have had with each other in the ’00s.

Afterwards, MVP explained how he trained with Barnett starting from 11 years ago and thanked him. “I’m good—he’s GREAT,” he said of Barnett. Barnett told MVP how proud he was of him and implied how much of a threat MVP would be in AEW. Barnett gave a great speech at the end said there was no company that could imitate what Bloodsport does. He also announced he’s going to be at Hammerstein Ballroom for GCW in January and called out anyone to face him. His opponent will be announced at a later date.

Final Thoughts
This was a fun event with a lot of cool, unique matches, as per usual. I think Dempsey vs. Williams was the standout match on the show, but not by all that much. Everything was either good or very good. The Bloodsport event itself finds its voice more & more with every show they put on, too. Overall, this is worth checking out in that it’s a great jumping-on point for those unfamiliar, while it’s yet another solid show top to bottom, as most Bloodsport regulars have come to expect.

Three WWE NXT wrestlers appear at TNA TV taping

The crossover between WWE and TNA Wrestling continued on Friday with three NXT wrestlers showing up at a TNA event.

Izzi Dame, Charlie Dempsey, and Myles Borne all made surprise appearances at the first night of TNA’s television tapings in Philadelphia. Dame was the opponent for Knockouts Champion Jordynne Grace, while Dempsey & Borne of No Quarter Catch Crew look to have started a program with The Rascalz.

After defeating Tatum Paxley at TNA Against All Odds, Grace issued another open challenge on Friday and again had it answered by an NXT wrestler. She defeated Dame to retain the Knockouts Championship.

This was Dame’s first-ever match outside of the WWE system. Before signing with WWE in 2022, she was a volleyball player for Eastern Michigan University.

Dempsey, the son of William Regal, made his presence felt at the TNA tapings in an angle where he interrupted a match between Trey Miguel and Leon Slater. Dempsey beat down Miguel, Slater, Zachary Wentz, and the referee.

Later in the night, Dempsey faced off against Wentz in a match where Borne interfered. Dempsey and Borne are stablemates in No Quarter Catch Crew with Damon Kemp and Tavion Heights.

The growing partnership between WWE and TNA has also seen TNA wrestlers Grace, Joe Hendry, and Frankie Kazarian appear for NXT recently.

TNA will be back at Philly’s 2300 Arena on Saturday for the final night of this weekend’s tapings.

WWE Main Event results: Brutus Creed vs. Myles Borne

This week’s WWE Main Event was taped at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans, Louisiana before Monday’s episode of Raw.

Given the news coming out of WWE this week, it remains to be seen what will happen to a show like Main Event, but it feels even more inconsequential than ever that this was a perfectly mediocre show this week.

Chelsea Green w/Piper Niven defeated Gigi Dolin (5:09)

This was fine, but nothing special. Niven interfered so that Green could get the win, but that’s pretty much what you would expect.

Dolin worked Main Event last month, getting a debut win against Elektra Lopez, but essentially played babyface in peril in this one until she was cheated out of a win.

Green was an excellent heel throughout, in a role that clearly suits her and that you can tell she enjoys. She was slow and methodical, asking the crowd at one stage here to ‘get your cameras ready for this one’.

Weirdly, Green and Dolin were wearing similar ring gear to the point where you’d think that they were a tag team that had just split.

Green used a chin lock and the crowd rallied behind Dolin who managed a roll-up for a two-count. They both collided and went down with Dolin getting up first and nailing Green with a German.

After a dropkick and another two-count, Dolin looked set to go home but Niven interfered, allowing Green to hit an UnPrettyHer for the win.

Brutus Creed w/Julius Creed defeated Myles Borne (6:58)

They got going after the commercials in this one and both worked hard, but it didn’t top the work that Julius Creed and Apollo Crews put in on the show last week.

Brutus Creed earned his first main roster singles win here against a returning Myles Borne in his third Main Event bout of his career. Borne looks good in flashes, but they are yet to give him a win on this show.

It was Borne who took the early going and they started slow, but built to a spot where Creed went up to the top rope. He was knocked to the outside with a slick dropkick from Borne as they went to an early break.

There was some back and forth after the ads, with Borne using some ground and pound and locked in the dreaded chin lock. The crowd did at least play along and cheered on Creed to break the hold.

Creed got some hope spots in with clotheslines and a Samoan Drop, followed by a standing moonsault, which was enough to earn him a two-count. Borne used his Orton-esque power slam but got blocked looking for a suplex.

In the end, Creed planted Borne in position with a powerbomb and then, despite Borne getting back to his feet, finished him with a top rope cannonball. It’s a soft-looking finisher from a really strong dude, but otherwise, you can’t help but be impressed by the Creed brothers.

WWE Main Event results: Duke Hudson vs. Myles Borne

This week’s WWE Main Event was taped at the Moda Center in Portland, Oregon before Monday’s episode of Raw.

All told, a fun show, but nothing was especially dazzling this week.

Bronson Reed defeated Javier Bernal (5:05)

This was all about how long Bernal could avoid the inevitable and it was fun while it lasted.

In a big man versus little man contest like this, you kind of know that it’s only a matter of time before the big man hits his move and wins. The fun of the chase and the potential for an upset is what keeps people watching. And this one was very much in that pattern.

Bernal was on the end of his second Main Event defeat here in his second appearance. He looked plucky enough but the crowd seem to be increasingly behind Reed, who hasn’t lost a TV taping bout since October.

The early going was Bernal ducking and weaving, avoiding the charges from Reed. He eventually got caught in a nerve hold but fought his way out, landing a couple of dropkicks to wobble Reed on his feet.

Reed then caught him off the top rope, nailing him with a DDT before they went to the finish.

The Tsunami is getting over with live crowds and it got Reed the win here, but longer term, its not going to be great on his body.

Duke Hudson defeated Myles Borne (6:06)

This lacked much excitement and dragged in the second half when the dreaded chin lock was brought out, but the ending was decent enough.

Hudson and Borne are still very new to main roster action and it showed a little bit in how safe and formulaic this match was. For Hudson, it was his fourth match on the show and only the second for Borne.

They did mat work in the first few minutes, exchanging headlocks and Hudson pushing his Chase U gimmick to the crowd. Before the break, Hudson missed a charge and Borne used a dropkick.

The highlight for Borne was the near fall he got from an Orton-esque scoop slam after having missed a dropkick and run into an elbow in the corner.

Hudson worked the whole match in his Chase U bib and did a full hulk up after that two count, stopping short at actually tearing his shirt.

In the end, the finish saw Hudson use a German and then his finisher – the scorpion death drop – to get the win. And, actually, as finishing moves go, its pretty cool.

WWE Main Event results: Joe Coffey vs. Von Wagner

This week’s WWE Main Event was taped at the Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, Michigan before Monday’s episode of Raw.

A solid episode of the show this week, with even more new faces as the show continues to promote NXT talent, allowing them to perform in front of pre-Raw crowds.

Apollo Crews defeated Myles Borne (5:13)

This was fine. Crews is starting to gain some momentum following his injury earlier this year against a debuting Myles Borne.

Borne made his Main Event debut in what was his first-ever appearance on a main roster WWE show. And for a guy who hasn’t had a ton of matches in his career to date, he did well.

The comparisons to Randy Orton have been with Borne since he joined the company and he did nothing to dispel that, showing an attitude here and also using a quick scoop slam a la Orton at one point.

Crews took the early going, dominating and slowing the pace of the match down. It was only when Borne thumbed his eye that the tide turned.

After some basic offense, Crews fired up with his usual splashes to the corner and the standing moonsault. Borne dodged a second splash and used a neckbreaker (not an RKO) for a near fall.

In the end, Crews hit Borne with an enzuigiri to line him up for a frog splash off the top rope and get his hand raised in back-to-back wins on Main Event.

Joe Coffey defeated Von Wagner (6:59)

This was a slow and steady bout that got going towards the end as Coffey got a surprising victory in his debut.

While Von Wagner has had a few sporadic appearances on Main Event over the last three years, this was Joe Coffey’s first outing on the show and so felt good for him to get a win. Wagner, however, goes to 0-6 with this loss.

Before the break, Wagner was in control and after the commercials, Coffey was working a comeback. He secured a submission and the match slowed right down after quite an explosive start.

Wagner worked his way out and culminated in a double underhook suplex for a two-count. Coffey blocked Wagner’s chokeslam attempt and then they went to the finish.

After Wagner had Coffey on his shoulder looking to finish him, Coffey raked his eyes and used his discuss lariat to get the win.

Two matches added to WWE NXT lineup

Two matches have been added to the lineup for WWE NXT this week. 

Dana Brooke vs. Lyra Valkyria has been booked for the show. Brooke is coming off a loss in tag action on August 29 when she and Kelani Jordan lost to Elektra Lopez and Lola Vice. Valkyria’s last match on WWE programming was a victory in mixed tag action with Dragon Lee over Dominik Mysterio and Rhea Ripley on August 22. 

WWE has also announced a six-man tag match for Tuesday’s show. Charlie Dempsey, Drew Gulak & Damon Kemp will team together to wrestle Brooks Jensen, Josh Briggs & Myles Borne.

WWE NXT on September 12 lineup:

  • NXT Women’s Championship: Tiffany Stratton defends against Becky Lynch
  • NXT Championship number one contender’s match: Wes Lee vs. Ilja Dragunov
  • Global Heritage Invitational: Tyler Bate vs. Axiom
  • Global Heritage Invitational: Akira Tozawa vs. Nathan Frazer
  • Creed Brothers vs. Edris Enofe and Malik Blade
  • Dana Brooke vs. Lyra Valkyria
  • Charlie Dempsey, Drew Gulak & Damon Kemp vs. Brooks Jensen, Josh Briggs & Myles Borne

Global Heritage Invitation standings:

Group A —

  • Butch: 3 points (1 win, 1 draw, 0 losses)
  • Axiom: 1 point (0 wins, 1 draw, 0 losses)
  • Tyler Bate: 0 points (0 wins, 0 draws, 0 losses)
  • Charlie Dempsey: 0 points (0 wins, 0 draws, 1 loss)

Group B —

  • Joe Coffey: 4 points (2 wins, 0 draws, 0 losses)
  • Nathan Frazer: 2 points (1 win, 0 draws, 1 loss)
  • Duke Hudson: 2 points (1 win, 0 draws, 1 loss)
  • Akira Tozawa: 0 points (0 wins, 0 draws, 2 losses)

NXT No Mercy on September 30 lineup:

  • NXT Championship: Carmelo Hayes defends against either Ilja Dragunov or Wes Lee
  • NXT North American Championship: Dominik Mysterio defends against Mustafa Ali
  • NXT Heritage Cup: Noam Dar defends against Global Heritage Invitational Tournament winner

NXT Level Up results: Myles Borne debuts

Thea Hail defeated Arianna Grace

Thea Hail was making her debut as a full-time student of Chase U. She apparently received a full ride, whatever that means.

This match was downright awkward at times, but the focus on arm work gave Hail ample selling time. It could have been worse.

Grace started the match by taking Hail to the mat. Hail fought to her feet by gaining control of Grace’s arm, maintaining the control through multiple attempts at offense from Grace. Grace eventually retook her lead by turning her attention to Hail’s arm. From standing to the mat, Grace was in total control of Hail’s arm.

Hail launched a comeback, connecting with quick offense while selling the arm. Grace caught Hail in a standing wrist lock, seemingly looking to close, but Hail reversed into a pin to score the win.

Guru Raaj defeated Myles Borne

Myles Borne, formerly David Bostian, made his debut in this match. Borne was a successful amateur wrestler before joining WWE, and it showed. This was a great debut match, with Borne’s offense looking especially crisp.

This match opened with a slick grappling sequence. The grappling continued to escalate, with Borne landing multiple snappy arm drags. Borne’s lead was punctuated with a pair of great dropkicks and a scoop slam for a near fall.

After kicking out, Raaj landed a big boot, rocking Raaj. Raaj caught Borne with a bunch of strikes and a bulldog from the second rope before pinning Borne. This was Raaj’s first win on Level up.

Ivy Nile defeated Elektra Lopez

Built around Lopez’s strength and Nile’s technique, this quickly became a legitimately great match. Ivy Nile is an extraordinary professional wrestler.

Lopez came to the ring with Legado del Fantasma. Before she finished her entrance, the D’Angelo Family walked out and forced Legado del Fantasma to the back. The D’Angelo Family accompanied Lopez for the rest of the match.

Nile opened the match by gaining control of Lopez’s back. Lopez tried to escape, only for Nile to transition into side control on the mat. Lopez, outwrestled, was forced to slam Nile to force the break.

Lopez used strikes and slams to extend her newfound control for some time. Lopez then stretched Nile before trying for a pin.

Nile eventually launched a rally after withstanding more strikes from Lopez. Lopez tried protecting her arm, but opened the door to a dragon sleeper from nowhere. Once Nile locked in the hold, Lopez tapped out.

Myles Borne to debut on WWE NXT Level Up

This week’s edition of Level Up will feature the televised in-ring debut of a new member of the NXT roster.

WWE has announced that Myles Borne (real name David Bostian) will make his televised debut against Guru Raaj on NXT Level Up this Friday night. Borne has a background in amateur wrestling and powerlifting.

Borne was part of the class of recruits who reported to the WWE Performance Center this March. WWE wrote when he signed with the company: “Twenty-three-year-old David Bostian of Wilmington, N.C., has been a folkstyle wrestler for 16 years while simultaneously training as a powerlifter.”

When the March Performance Center class was announced, Borne drew attention on social media for looking like Randy Orton.

WWE filed a trademark for “Myles Borne” on June 8. He made his first appearance for NXT when the brand return to running house shows in Florida last weekend. Borne took part in a house show match that was interrupted by Von Wagner.

NXT Level Up airs on Peacock/WWE Network at 10 p.m. Eastern time on Fridays. Here’s the full lineup for this week’s episode:

  • Ivy Nile vs. Elektra Lopez
  • Thea Hail vs. Arianna Grace
  • Guru Raaj vs. Myles Borne