NXT Takeover: Brooklyn III

I watched the Takeover specials 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.

August 19, 2017 – Brooklyn, New York

Andrade Cien Almas def. Johnny Gargano
That was a hell of an opener, getting the Brooklyn crowd louder than they were for the entirely of Takeover Brooklyn II. This definitely accomplished what it set out to, even though watching Gargano take the L after getting betrayed on the last show was a bit of a bummer. **** Get used to it dude, you’re going to be watching Gargano take a lot of Ls.

Alexander Wolfe & Eric Young def. Akam & Rezar {NXT Tag Team Championship Match}
On the one hand, the way Rezar was pinned (taking one double-team finisher) kind of tarnished all the build and destruction that went into making the Authors of Pain so unstoppable for the last several months. On this other hand, this was leagues better than it had any right to be given who was involved. Sure they pulled out a lot of tricks to make it work, but that’s how you do it. And then, just as I was worried about a SAnitY title reign, Bobby Fish and Kyle O’Reilly come out and beat the crap out of everyone and I feel a bit of relief. ***¼ That’s a bit of a crutch that NXT uses in the tag division to set up new feuds. Also, I need to give the Authors of Pain a lot of credit (more than I gave them in my original review here) because they had way more good matches than bad. SAnitY less so, but still, they’re game. 

Aleistar Black def. Hideo Itami 
I don’t really know what to make of this match. They really didn’t pull it together until the end of the thing, and Itami’s heel shtick in America is nowhere near as entertaining as it was in Japan. I was pretty disappointed in this, as it was just a few stiff shots and a nutty avalanche spot. *** Emblematic of most of Itami’s NXT run, which was about to come to an end.

Asuka def. Ember Moon {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
The pre-match video does a great job of making Moon seem like the first credible threat in a long time, pointing out that Asuka has only ever cheated once, and it was to beat Moon, and then showing Moon lay her out with the Eclipse. I’m here for this. And it was a really great match, but everything before it and everything in it was built to Moon winning. They got out of it in a clever way, with Asuka using the same kind of trick to try to win, failing, and then going back to legal (though tricky) tactics to put Moon down. That said, this was the time to move the title and they missed it. **** While it would have been cool for the Mae Young Classic to be the thing that produced the woman to finally put Asuka down, I think they kind of lucked out that she got hurt here and moved onto the main roster in the middle of a win streak.

Drew McIntyre def. Bobby Roode [NXT Championship Match]
McIntyre is a big big boy, and big boys sometimes shouldn’t wrestle long matches. It’s not that McIntyre seemed blown up, but like many NXT main events, this was longer than it needed to be for the story it was telling. In this case it was basically twice as long as it needed to be and while it was competent enough, it was rather soulless. And that’s really not a great kind of match to have when you’re crowning a new champion and then setting him up against the Ring of Honor invasion army. That said, it’s cool that there’s an ROH invasion army. And even if they look really small compared to McIntyre, the post-match angle had kind of a R4dicalz vibe to it. ***¼ They looked REALLY small compared to McIntyre.