November 14, 2018 – Winter Park, Florida
Bianca Belair def. Mia Yim
Nigel McGuinness reveals that Yim and Shayna Baszler are roommates, which to me kind of ruins the mystique of Baszler. That said, if they do a three-camera sitcom about their home life I’d be quick to forgive it. This match started out real boring and then picked up a bit. It didn’t pick up a lot, which is probably a symptom of why Belair vs. Jesus Cross in a blow off match isn’t getting a spot at Takeover. Belair needs to stop doing things that don’t make sense, like rolling away from her opponent after hitting her finisher, making her have to crawl back to said opponent to get the pin. Little things like that disrupt the flow of the finish. **
Matt Riddle gets interviewed and proves he has the sense of humor of a 17-year-old South Park fan. That’s not necessarily a knock on him. Kassius Ohno approaches him to complain about all the Riddle hype. They’ll fight a week from tonight.
Lacey Evans def. Karissa Rivera
Two women’s matches in a row, it’s like the Mae Young Classic up in here. I don’t review squashes, but Evans some good heeling here. N/A
Kyle O’Reilly def. Hanson
Hanson cucked out Ricochet and Pete Dunne and demanded he represent their team in this match. The winner’s team gets the advantage in War Games this weekend at Takeover. On the merits of the action in the match, this was a solid bout with a bad finish. On the merits of the build to the War Games match, this was perfect. O’Reilly and Hanson put on a good strength vs. technique match, but then things took a hard left turn as their Takeover teammates came out and fought with one another at ringside. It wasn’t satisfying in a self-contained environment, but it wasn’t meant to be, and that’s cool with me. ***¼
I’m really interested in Takeover, as there are only four matches on the 210-minute show, every match could reasonably be a main event (how often can you say that and have it actually be true), and every match will likely get a lot of time. Can’t wait. And since I’m not ready to stop riding my wave of enthusiasm, here’s a bonus review.
November 14, 2018 – Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia
Fabian Aichner def. Marcel Barthel
This is from WWE’s first developmental tryout in Germany, and you can find it on their YouTube channel. I think as long as matches like this keep popping up I’ll post my reviews of them on the flagship show (unless they’re more specifically appropriate to a subsidiary brand like UK or whatever comes next). The crowd is made up of wrestlers trying out and WWE personnel. The venue has the same aesthetic as the WWE Performance Center, and it’s pretty impressive that they found such a lookalike space in Germany. They even had an apron made up that says WWE Germany Tryouts 2018. This company is firing on all cylinders branding-wise. The first half of the match was really basic, but once it came back from the mid-roll YouTube ad they picked things up a bit and the finish was dope. I’d be down to see NXT Germany if this is the seed of the thing. **¾
Because the Cruiserweight Championship is now an NXT title I’m reviewing every title defense of the WWE/NXT Cruiserweight Championship and posting them on the NXT TV reviews that preceded them. Here’s the title defense from Survivor Series 2018.
November 18, 2018 – Los Angeles, California
Buddy Murphy def. Mustafa Ali {WWE Cruiserweight Championship Match}
Ali beat Tony Nese to earn this title shot, in the only championship match on this show. I loved the way Murphy shoved and tossed Ali away from him every time the smaller man began to take control. That was such a cool touch. It’s a real shame that it took the crowd ten minutes to get invested in the match, because they put on a good big man/little man match and busted ass to get the fans’ attention. Murphy won in 12:20 with Murphy’s Law after catching Ali with a knee in the corner. ***½