June 1, 2019 – Bridgeport, Connecticut
During the pre-show, Tommaso Ciampa more or less confirmed he’ll be returning to the ring and wants back in the NXT title picture. That makes me feel a certain sense of joy as this show begins.
Matt Riddle def. Roderick Strong
Wow. After an intensely simmering start, Riddle and Strong went full boil and beat the absolute snot out of each other in an insanely creative war. These two have a similar intensity, and in a way Riddle performs a more evolved version of Strong’s style. I love the way that Strong had to string together offense in a way that he hasn’t really done since his time on the indies, but was forced to here because Riddle does it to great success. Both guys sold the struggle they were in so well. It was just perfect that, since they were so evenly matched, Riddle would have to break out a world-killing finisher to put Strong away. ****½
Montez Ford & Angelo Dawkins def. Steve Cutler & Wesley Blake, Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly, and Oney Lorcan & Danny Burch {NXT Tag Team Championship Ladder Match}
The Street Profits have been a team for over three years, and this is their first Takeover. That’s pretty wild. It’s the Forgotten Sons’ first Takeover despite being around since last summer, but who cares? This was one of those ladder matches that leaned toward being slightly more about spots than about winning the match, and that’s not so much my bag. The seams on quite a few of those spots were showing too, but that’s what happens when you try to plan a lot of complicated sequences that need a prop. That said, a lot of this match was really exciting and well-executed, and the mini-story of the Jaxson Ryker problem in the middle of the match was a cool arc. The crowd was really into the Profits winning so that was nice too. ***¾
Velveteen Dream def. Tyler Breeze {NXT North American Championship Match}
Dream went sneaky jerk here, as he was getting owned by Breeze’s new aggressive offense and had to throw in a few distractions to retain the title. This felt like it was on the edge of being mind-blowing, but mostly stuck around at the level of just great. They did a Takeover main event style exchange, so it had amazing action. But I feel like I have wrestling blue balls because I kept getting so close to the point of epic but not giving me that epic release. After the match, Breeze asks Dream for a selfie, and this time he doesn’t lay the champ out afterwards. That was cute, I guess they’re friends now. ****
Punishment Martinez is coming, but now his name is Damien Priest. Okay fine, dude is awesome I don’t care what they call him.
Shayna Baszler def. Io Shirai {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
I was pretty deflated by the result here. Now don’t get me wrong, the match was excellent, but given that Shirai was dominating and that Candice LeRae was able to thwart Marina Shaffir & Jessamyn Duke, it felt like it was the right time to move the title off of Baszler. I guess they have something else in mind because after the match, Shirai goes insane and beats up Bazler with a kendo stick and a chair. Kind of makes her seem like a poor loser. I guess the inevitable hardcore match between these two could be fun. ***¾
NXT UK is getting another Takeover, this time in Cardiff on August 31st. I wonder what match they’ll give Flash Morgan Webster.
Adam Cole def. Johnny Gargano {NXT Championship Match}
Josiah Williams comes out with Cole and sings his Wrestle & Flow version of his entrance song. The chemistry between Cole and Gargano is almost obscene. Beyond that, everything they do makes logical sense in a way that wrestling rarely attempts. Little things like Cole bailing out of the ring the second he sees Gargano posing before hitting his big thrust kick are what sets matches like this apart from everything else in NXT right now (a high bar). Building the match around the complicated Panama Sunrise was another nice touch. There were so many times I believed that this match could end, but it ended at the perfect time. Gargano looked like a beast in the loss too, taking Cole’s arm every single time it was exposed, but Cole was just that much smarter and able to grow every seed he planted into a beautiful victory flower. This was remarkably different than their last Takeover match, but it was every bit as good. I may even like it more. The commentators try to sell Cole as a Triple Crown Champion now, but that’s pretty hollow since he never won the tag titles and just subbed in for an injured colleague. *****