July 31, 2019 – Winter Park, Florida
Tyler Breeze def. Jaxson Ryker
After a couple minutes of Ryker beating on Breeze, Breeze catches Ryker with a sunset flip for the win. That was fun enough for the short amount of time it lasted, but the real news is Fandango returning after the match to save Breeze from a Forgotten Sons beating. The crowd was really into this and Fandango looked like a big deal for the first time maybe ever. N/A
Cameron Grimes def. Bronson Reed {Semifinal Match}
OzZilla is an awesome nickname for Reed, and makes me really want to see him face off against Dave Mastiff. This didn’t do much for me, as there wasn’t a ton of flow to it. Grimes hitting his finisher out of nowhere to win the match in front of a quiet crowd didn’t do anything to change my mind. **½
Matt Riddle finally addresses his beating at the hands of Killian Dain and says he wants Dain to fight him face-to-face. That will happen next week. When and where is it taking place? Because it sure as hell hasn’t been taped yet. They also announce a tag title match contract signing for next week. Earlier, Candice LeRae was waiting for Io Shirai outside the building. Now, William Regal tells her that Shirai isn’t coming, but he books a match between them at Takeover. That will be the first time there have been two women’s matches on a Takeover in three years (almost to the date), and the last time it happened they were still doing six matches on Takeover specials.
Shayna Bazler storms out to the ring and calls out how dastardly Yim’s actions have been in recent weeks. She’s totally right. On the bright side, Yim cuts a promo that’s anything but squeaky clean babyface, so at least this is tonally consistent with the beatings she put on Baszler’s crew.
Pete Dunne def. Roderick Strong
Dunne is now 3-0 over Strong in singles matches. This couldn’t reach the heights of their best against each other, though things like Dunne tugging on Strong’s ear to kick out of a pin are the kinds of things he does that remind me why I love him. To be fair, this was probably on par with their second match and it had a better finish; it’s just that the bar set by their first fight is a high one to clear. Dunne won this one clean by making Strong tap out to the finger snaps. I’d like to see that play into the Takeover triple threat. After the match, Dream comes down to the ring and gets his fingers caught by Dunne. The crowd chants “Triple Threat” because this was taped before Regal’s backstage announcement aired. ***½