March 9, 2016 – Winter Park, Florida
William Regal comes out to the ring to announce that Baron Corbin will face Austin Aries at Takeover in Dallas, and that Corbin is not suspended because Aries has asked that he not be. Also, the winner of tonight’s 2 Out Of 3 Falls Match will get their shot in Dallas. That match happens now.
Samoa Joe def Sami Zayn {2 Out Of 3 Falls Number One Contender’s Match}
I have a few qualms with the very long first fall. I can’t say that they were arbitrarily elongating the fall without going for the win. They were definitely going for the win, but Joe spent a lot of time giving Zayn space. That made the pace a little tough given that almost no match had gone over twenty minutes on this show before, let alone one fall in three. But then the end of the first fall was kind of brilliant, as a tired Zayn fell when trying to climb the ropes and Joe smacked him with a nasty STO and Muscle Buster to go up 1-0.
The second fall started out spectacularly, with Zayn only being allowed to continue because he insisted upon it, and Joe just repeatedly perching him up top to set up the Muscle Buster. When that doesn’t work, Joe goes for count out wins. When that doesn’t work, Joe goes for a lariat that worked for him in the first fall, but gets caught in the Koji Clutch and realizes it’s smarter for him to tap than to absorb the damage. Joe showed how good he is at the little things, making it clear he was tapping out of frustration in not being able to quickly escape, rather than tapping because he couldn’t handle the pain.
The commentators start the third fall by talking about all the things they had planned for the evening that clearly aren’t going to happen because this match is taking up the whole show. That’s a nice touch. The rest of the fall was two desperate, tired guys throwing what they could at their opponent, mostly unable to hit their big moves, and Zayn getting the worst of those mistakes as Joe sidesteps a Helluva Kick and chokes him out. You have to respect the way they kept a WWE crowd engaged for almost 45 minutes, and that they never ever resorted to rest holds to fill the time. They were always going for the win, and while the pace was slow, it most certainly wasn’t boring. From an action perspective it wasn’t face-melting, but from a storytelling perspective it’s a hell of a feat. ****
So that’s it for the episode, but a one match review is lame. Here’s a bonus: Much like WWE’s last Network special, WWE Roadblock booked one match for an NXT championship. Unlike the last WWE Network special, the match from this show wasn’t shown on NXT TV, probably because the titles didn’t change hands.
March 12, 2016 – Toronto, Ontario
Dash Wilder & Scott Dawson def. Enzo Amore & Colin Cassady {NXT Tag Team Championship Match}
Dash & Dawson been referred to as the Revival for the last few weeks, but they haven’t actually been wrestling on the show so this is the first time I’ve noticed. I think Wilder was injured for a bit. So that’s their excuse for this being their first title defense in three months. What’s Finn Balor’s excuse? During the match on commentary, Michael Cole harkens back to a bygone era of tag team wrestling when talking about the Revival. And then JBL gets confused (or just stupid) and starts talking about “the great era of tag team wrestling in the late ‘90s,” is then unable to name any team but the New Age Outlaws (clearly connecting them to Enzo & Cass), and has to be bailed out by Cole who drops the APA to suck up to him. Just awful commentary. The APA wasn’t the APA until after the ‘90s, and that’s the smallest problem with this commentary.
Oh, right, there was a match. I actually liked this more than their match in London, and more than any other Enzo & Cass match. There were more creative maneuvers, more breathtaking near-falls, a better finish, and a cute way to utilize and empower Carmella. Just really good stuff all around and a nice pseudo-farewell for Enzo & Cass in NXT. ***¾