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.
February 27, 2014 – Winter Park, Florida
Cesaro def. Sami Zayn
The crowd chanted match of the year before the match started, but I’ll try not to hold that against the match. The match certainly met the crowd’s (and internet’s) expectations, and while I liked it, I had a few more bones to pick than they did. I would have cut out at least five of the 23 minutes they were allotted, as the match had some odd pacing issues. Sami’s selling was pretty good, and the action was exciting when the two played off of their history with each other. But as I mentioned, it felt overlong and the finishing sequence felt like a shift from 1st to 4th gear. ***½ I still think this match is pretty overrated, and that their 2/3 Falls match is better by more than a little. Update in 2019: I still think this match is overrated, but not as overrated as I did before. It’s definitely longer than it needs to be, but Cesaro was in his killer cyborg mode here and Zayn had his working boots on too. ****
Mojo Rawley def. CJ Parker
The commentators’ climate change denial during this match was disturbing, and also more interesting than any of the action. Parker is apparently a hippy, and that’s offensive to NXT? I don’t get it, and this match was nothing. Be like me and just pretend that Parker is brother YASSHI. * Both guys are still lame.
Konnor & Viktor def. Scotty 2 Hotty & Grandmaster Sexay [NXT Tag Team Championship Match]
I don’t understand what the goal of this was. It’s your brand’s biggest show to date so you have your tag champs squash a jobber act that was popular 14 years ago? Why not have them go over contemporary jobbers more quickly? Or have them beat a real team in a more competitive match? This just seemed like the worst of both worlds, and it was boring. ½* What I didn’t know was that shortly before this show, NXT had pretty much openly admitted that they didn’t have a tag team division.
Paige def. Emma [NXT Women’s Championship Match]
Stephanie McMahon tries to sell the “Divas Division” ahead of time as something as legitimate if not more legitimate as the men’s division… and then it’s revealed that Emma won her #1 contender position in a dance-off. Match was pretty dull for the most part, but had a hell of a final stretch. **¾ So to be fair, NXT kind of recognized this issue and had Emma defend her title shot in a dope match against Natalya. They definitely should have mentioned that here. Like the opener, a better version of this match happened on NXT TV last year. It’s definitely worth seeking those matches out on episodes 179 and 183.
Tyler Breeze nc. Xavier Woods
This match is important because a male contingent in the crowd chants, “Breeze is gorgeous,” proving the fans are more comfortable with their manhood than the announcers (who were earlier calling Parker “strange” because he didn’t conform to their preconceived notions of manliness). And that’s good too, because the match never starts as Rusev assaults them both. N/A They really sacrificed Woods at the alter of Rusev over and over and over again.
Adrian Neville def. Bo Dallas [NXT Championship Ladder Match]
I have mixed feelings about ladder matches. This one was neat. Neville was determined to get something good out of Dallas, and the champion seemed game enough. They didn’t reinvent the wheel or meet HBK’s (who had come out to promote a DVD before the match) legacy, but they gave the fans an exciting little main event to cap the show. ***½ I like this as a main event because it represents the final transition from the FCW era to the NXT/Network era.