April 1, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida
Velveteen Dream def. Bobby Fish
It’s very clear that the commentary was done in post, so I wonder why they decided that NXT fans should have to suffer through Sam Roberts in the booth. I know Roberts isn’t a racist guy, but his shtick to date has been to be a heel commentator almost exclusively to the black wrestlers. Anyway, they more or less pulled the structure of their match from last year for this, which worked pretty well as it was focused on an attack to Dream’s leg. The only thing that didn’t work was Dream playing to the non-existent crowd when going for the Purple Rainmaker. And then the match had two commercials, which is insane given there’s no forward momentum without fans, and Dream wins out of nowhere with the Dream Valley Driver at 9:17 (shown of 15:51). Dream calls out Adam Cole again after the match. **¾
Malcolm Bivens officially introduces Rinku Singh and Saurav Gurjar and calls their group Bivens Enterprises. They’re waiting for the Broserweights. They’re gonna be waiting a long ass time.
Dexter Lumis def. Jake Atlas
This is a bad use of Atlas. This was pretty much a squash during which Lumis showed off both his boring offense and his inability to do things that might not have been boring. He won with the Anaconda Vice at 3:25. N/A
They show the Killer Kross video, which now features his face. It does not feature a name. Then, they announce that the Tommaso Ciampa vs. Johnny Gargano match is called “One Final Beat.” I get it, but I don’t love it.
Dakota Kai def. Shotzi Blackheart, Deonna Purrazzo, Xia Li, and Kayden Carter {Gauntlet Match}
Blackheart starts with Purrazzo, had a decent little exchange, and then won with a diving senton at 3:43. Li came out next and basically kicked the shit out of Blackheart. I dig that. But Blackheart won with a double underhook type deal at 5:27 (shown of 9:46). Next out is Aliyah, who doesn’t totally embarrass herself. You have to consider that a win. Blackheart beats her with the same submission at 8:54 (shown of 13:15). Carter is out next with a lot of fire. Most of their match happened during the break, and immediately after it Blackheart won with the diving senton at 10:39 (shown of 18:06). Kai is out last to put an end to this silent Cinderella Story. Having Kai and Raquel Gonzalez get an unfair advantage on Blackheart in the final segment hammered home the underdog story for Blackheart, which is nice, and elevated this from a very average (perhaps below average) gauntlet match to something with a nice story. Kai won the whole thing with the Kota Kick at 16:29 (shown of 23:46). **¾
Kushida def. Joaquin Wilde
This was as good as it was going to be, because both these guys are great and deserve more time than this and an actual storyline. Kushida won with a cross armbreaker at 5:32 (shown of 8:47). Ooof, you know it seems lazy to rate every match on this episode the same, but this is just the level of quality we’re getting tonight. You get what you get and you don’t get upset. **¾
Wilde is being interviewed when those random luchadors kidnap him. I can’t wait until this weird Lucha Underground-inspired faction debuts.
Keith Lee def. Dominik Dijakovic and Damian Priest {NXT North American Championship Triple Threat Match}
In a nice touch, they put a Takeover: Tampa logo on the big screen to distinguish this as a would-be Takeover match. This was another one that was probably as good as it could be without a crowd. It was a relief, as the Lee vs. Dijakovic matches all relied heavily on the excited crowd. They put together enough dope big-man spots to keep me entertained here, even if the silent moments and Roberts’ subdued commentary were a drag. The finish was also pretty creative, as Dijakovic got caught with Priest’s baton when going for Feast Your Eyes, which left him open for Lee’s Supernova at 11:56 (shown). ***½