NXT Takeover

May 29, 2014 – Winter Park, Florida

I watched the Takeover specials (and Arrival) before I watched the TV show. So I’m going to add notes to my original reviews now that I have the full context. I’ll put them in red.

Adam Rose def. Camacho
Half the match was a chinlock, so, you know, it pretty much sucked. That said Rose was crazy over and had a pretty nice spinebuster. You can’t hate on a nice spinebuster. ** Basically this feud was Camacho jobbing out to Rose over and over. Rose may have a nice spinebuster, but having now sat through his run as Leo Kruger and as Adam Rose, I’m officially out on Mr. Leppan.

The Ascension def. El Local & Kalisto [NXT Tag Team Championship Match]
Why do these Ascension squashes get drawn out so much? And why are they for the tag team titles? I’m torn here because I’d have rather seen Kalisto featured as the stronger member of the team, but then crappy El Local would have been in the match more. This is a pretty boring long-term strategy for a tag team division, and the match was mostly butt. *¼ And then I went and watched the Ascension every week on TV and complained about their short matches too. Luckily, our national nightmare would end in just a few months. 

Tyler Breeze def. Sami Zayn [#1 Contender’s Match]
So if you watch these shows the way I do, skipping the weekly show and just watching the big shows, the number one contender match features an opening match loser vs. a guy who got beat up before his match could even begin on the last show. Apparently they’re fighting here because of some silliness involving a battle royal, but I only know that because I glanced at something related to it on Tyson Kidd’s Wikipedia page. Not great, NXT. I was really surprised by the finish, and I liked it a lot. An inadvertent low blow coming from a block is something you really don’t see much of. It took them a bit to get going, and the final stretch was a little loosey goosey, but this was better than I was prepared for and probably close to as good as Zayn’s over-hyped match with Cesaro. ***¼ I’ll still say that they could have done a better job explaining why these two were fighting on this show, but the actual build to the match on NXT TV was solid. It wasn’t amazing, but it was solid.

There’s a weird, xenophobic segment in which awful Mojo Rawley threatens to shove the Russian flag up Alexander Rusev’s “Putin” and then gets dominated. It was such an odd segment, as the American “hero” just gets destroyed for being an overzealous nationalist. What is NXT’s point of view supposed to be even?

Charlotte def. Natalya [NXT Women’s Championship Match]
The video package for this match was incredible. Also, it’s nice of them to have former champion Paige come out before the match and explain why she’s not champion anymore. I didn’t get any of that from the loser vs. loser number one contender’s match earlier. I also just realized this is the first Charlotte match I’ve ever seen. This was fueled by nostalgia and backed up by skill and I enjoyed it quite a bit. **** I don’t have much to add here. This match was awesome and the reason I was convinced that watching all of NXT could be a worthy endeavor.  

Adrian Neville def. Tyson Kidd [NXT Championship Match]
For everything this match had in stiff, convincing action, it lacked in flow. Kidd probably could have been a solid midcarder in WWE if not for all his injuries, but after this performance it’s clear he’d never be able to capture a crowd. *** He also wasn’t great on the mic, and was more fun to watch in the ring before his leg injury. That’s harsh, and Kidd was always a solid hand, but guys like Neville, Zayn, Finn Balor and the many who would come after them were leagues ahead of Kidd at this point in his career.