FrAxiom Reveal the Almost-Split That Nearly Changed Their NXT Run

What began as a rivalry nearly designed to implode has instead become one of NXT’s most successful tag team stories. Nathan Frazer and Axiom, now known collectively as FrAxiom, went from clashing personalities to multi-time champions, and according to Frazer, that tension has always been the foundation of their chemistry rather than a flaw.
“I’m so serious; there isn’t anything that, like right off the bat, we just agree on. Ever,” Frazer admitted during an appearance on The Rich Eisen Show. He believes that contrast is exactly why the pairing works. “I think we’re so similar… but also, we’re just completely different wrestlers and completely different people.” Reflecting on their Best of Three series in NXT 2.0, Frazer said it was a proving ground for both men: “We wanted to really just showcase to everybody how good we were… to the office, and to ourselves.”
The twist is that FrAxiom was never meant to last. Frazer revealed the original plan was a slow-burn split that would lead to a classic betrayal storyline. “The long-term plan wasn’t ever to really be a tag team,” he said, explaining that he initially envisioned a singles heel run. Axiom confirmed the partnership was accidental but transformative, saying, “There is something about tag team wrestling that is so special… the action you can get in tag team wrestling is way higher than in singles wrestling!” When creative momentum peaked, both men went directly to Shawn Michaels to stop the breakup. “Shawn! Don’t do it! Please don’t do it,” Frazer recalled, noting that a Hair vs. Mask match at Stand & Deliver 2023 had once been the planned destination.
Why it matters is simple: FrAxiom’s success is a case study in WWE allowing organic chemistry to override long-term booking plans. Instead of forcing a predictable split, NXT pivoted and the result was one of the brand’s most compelling teams.
With Frazer openly acknowledging his singles ambitions and Axiom praising the art of tag wrestling, the future remains flexible. Whether FrAxiom eventually separates or continues stacking accolades, their rise proves that sometimes the best stories are the ones that weren’t supposed to happen.



