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.
November 18, 2017 – Houston, Texas
Lars Sullivan def. Kassius Ohno
The commentators, pretty much no matter who they are (except for Corey Graves because he’s largely perfect on commentary), keep using the word decimation wrong. It’s not that extreme of an adjective, guys. This match told a great story, that Sullivan isn’t particularly skilled but that his brute force is enough to carry him through. Bummer to see Ohno as enhancement talent, but I guess that’s what happens when you get hired back to WWE at his age. *** And weight.
Aleister Black def. Velveteen Dream
This feud is billed around Black and Dream being opposites, but to NXT’s credit they don’t really have a gimmick that’s really opposite Dream. That is, unless you go by SAnitY’s original conception as the nazi crew from Smokin’ Aces, but the truth is that SAnitY is barely a realized gimmick at all. The storyline of this match overwhelmed the action here, and because of it they weren’t able to build any significant flow. Also I kind of feel like Dream came out of this looking a bit like a chump. All sizzle and no steak, as they say, but at least the sizzle was well done. **¾ I caught a lot of shit for this review so I rewatched the match and I honestly have no idea what I was thinking the first time I watched this. It may not have been the breakout classic that some called it, but it had the crowd going absolutely insane, it built a very significant flow, and it paid off an interesting storyline. I was very wrong the first time around. ****
Ember Moon def. Kairi Sane, Peyton Royce & Nikki Cross {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
I feel like logic should dictate that the winner of the Mae Young Classic tournament would win the title after Asuka’s graduation to the main roster left it vacant. But then they held some bullshit qualifying matches for the other three spots here (especially bullshit because Cross lost her match to Royce, but still won a battle royal to be in this). The finish of this match was so blatantly contrived and so poorly hidden by a bad camera angle that it totally took me out of the match. Ember winning felt inevitable, which also isn’t a great feeling. On the bright side, Sane’s flying elbow is amazing. ***¼ Indeed, this one gets a 10 on the CES because Royce and Cross were just hanging on each other and Cross was blatantly looking at Moon waiting for the move to hit. Worst Eclipse ever. My criticism of the build to the match doesn’t really make sense, as Sane won the tournament before Asuka vacated the title, and this four-way was a perfectly reasonable way to crown a new champion. But man, that Eclipse was trash.
Andrade Cien Almas def. Drew McIntyre {NXT Championship Match}
It was so nice of McIntyre to stop by NXT and transition the title from Roode to Almas. This match was pretty good, working well around the fact that McIntyre is a big big boy. The finish was pretty sloppy, but it got the job done. ***½ I wish they’d built up Almas a bit more before giving him the title, as he really only had two big singles wins going into this, and he never won a contender’s match. But then, his gimmick is kind of that he’s a cheater so I guess it works.
Adam Cole, Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly def. Eric Young, Killian Dain & Alexander Wolfe, & Roderick Strong, Akam & Rezar {War Games}
On the one hand, I have a lot of respect for these guys for really going for it in this match. Wolfe had a really nasty gash on his head, Rezar basically got his face punched to mush, and Dain hit a goddamn Van Terminator. That’s pretty wild stuff. Everyone worked hard. But like so many main events in NXT, this was overlong and filled with over-complicated spots that took too long to set up. For critics of the match who said this wasn’t really Wargames, I say it was much more of a Wargames match than most of the ones WCW put on before they went under. And for people who say this match is amazing, I say that’s fueled by nostalgia. People praised the brawl, but any objective viewer could see that the match was based around setting up spots, not intense brawling. The truth is somewhere in between. ***½ Yep, that’s still how I feel about this match. I’m also a little disturbed as I notice that this year’s War Games match is getting the exact same buildup. Undisputed Era is screwing up other people’s matches, just like they did last year. The only difference this year is that the Undisputed Era are the tag champs so everyone is after them, unlike how the AOP were only really interested in SAnitY last year.