Before we get to tonight’s show, Rhea Ripley attempted to defend her title at WrestleMania. Let’s take a look at that.
April 5, 2020 – Orlando, Florida
Charlotte Flair def. Rhea Ripley {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
It’s a little odd that they keep making a big deal of Flair being a ten-time champion when the title she’s fighting for (which she’s held once before) isn’t counted toward that total. Ripley looks so hot in her white WrestleMania outfit that I almost can’t stand it. Ripley’s selling was really good here, if maybe a little too screamy for a champion. I guess since she ended up losing by submission it worked. The spots where she used the injured leg anyway would have worked a lot better with a crowd cheering her on, so add that to the list of COVID-19 bummers. The match did tell a good story though, as Ripley blew her load early and then spent the rest of the match getting her previously injured leg taken apart. Flair won the title at 20:28 with the Figure Eight Leglock.
I am looking forward to the rematch of this
after Flair beats the winner of the NXT ladder match down the line. ****
Okay, onto tonight’s biz.
April 8, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida
Io Shirai def. Tegan Nox, Candice LeRae, Dakota Kai, Mia Yim, and Chelsea Green {Number One Contender Ladder Match}
This match gets the Takeover graphic treatment. I have a feeling these will be compiled into a makeshift Takeover on the WWE Network. Mauro Ranallo is back on commentary, and he’s handling this solo. The ladder match at WrestleMania was one of the best matches on either night, so I had relatively high hopes for this. Having Robert Stone and Raquel Diaz around to talk trash and make noise certainly helped. They actually both got involved in the match in entertaining spots. Ranallo keeps calling Nox Lady Kane, but that suggests that she was somehow aligned with Kane and not just that she uses one of his moves (and was a fan of his growing up). The big bumps, which were quite impressive, didn’t have as much stringing them together as well as in the tag title match a few nights ago, but this felt like a good effort from all involved. Shirai won at 11:53. I’m down for her vs. Charlotte Flair since heel vs. heel might as well get done in front of no fans. ***¼
We check in on Finn Balor’s pursuit of WALTER. I liked the ambition of doing this feud in NXT and UK, and it’s just a real shame that the timing got destroyed by a global pandemic. It’s also a shame that Balor’s match against Alexander Wolfe wasn’t great. Balor says he’s coming for WALTER”s title. I wonder how they’ll square that with Ilja Dragunov being the number one contender.
Killer Kross is still getting ready to debut. Also, you’ll remember Raul Mendoza and Joaquin Wilde have been kidnapped. Between these things and cinematic wrestling headlining WrestleMania, we’re basically just in Lucha Underground now.
Rinku & Saurav def. Matt Martel & Chase Parker
Malcolm Bivens’ boys are collectively known as Indus Sher. They win with a guillotine elbowdrop on Parker at 4:42. Basic squash, surprised it wasn’t shorter. N/A
Adam Cole congratulates Velveteen Dream on his win over Bobby Fish. But he still doesn’t think that Dream deserves a title shot. He does say that if Dream keeps pushing him that they might fight after all. Why are they stalling on this? And BREAKING NEWS: Jordan Devlin can’t defend his title during the pandemic because of travel bans, so there will be a tournament starting next week to crown an interim NXT Cruiserweight Champion. Then they show clips of the Ripley vs. Flair match that I reviewed above. They both cut post-match promos, and Ripley admits that Flair was a lot better than she expected.
Johnny Gargano def. Tommaso Ciampa
So this is getting cinematic treatment (with atmospheric music), which is a major relief. A banged up LeRae came with Gargano to the empty building, and then drives off in their car. Triple H waits in a ring in the building and says that when the match ends, the rivalry is over. Actually, the music stopped when the match began. The atmospheric cinematography was welcome, but I think that given the matches length they should have spent more time in the ring. Brawling on the floor only stays interesting for so long, and around the ten minute mark this started giving me flashbacks of the dull as dirt Last Man Standing marathon from WrestleMania. While this didn’t have the handicap of the need for multiple false ten-counts, it had a ton of dead time when nothing was happening but walking around. Twenty minutes into the match they got back inside the ring, wooden planks exposed in a call back to their Chicago match. There was never any real momentum trading in this match though, so when the referee got bumped and Ciampa got frustrated, it was hard to feel for him because it’s not like he had the match in the bag at that point. A couple minutes later he almost got the win in the same way he did in Chicago, and by that point the former wrestler referee still being down felt stupid.
LeRae came back and cried and said she hated her husband because of Gargano. Then she low-blowed gargano and walked out. Apparently that was enough to make Ciampa feel like things had gone too far. But with his guard down LeRae returned and hit a low blow on Ciampa, only for Gargano to pull out a protective cup. I literally just (as in while I was watching the match) saw someone predict this would happen on Twitter, thought it was stupid as hell then, and don’t like it much more now. Gargano then hit the Fairytale Ending for the win at 35:46. Yeah I didn’t like this. If this wasn’t going to have music, it needed commentary. Too much silence, too long, too much walking and punching, not enough wrestling (only one actual near-fall). All we really got out of it was LeRae turning heel, and there’s no real way for Ciampa to get revenge on her. Not to mention that nothing was on the line, so what was it worth to bring this feud back only to end it like this? I guess we can cling to Killer Kross & Scarlett Bordeaux looking at Gargano & LeRae from their car at the end. **¼