NXT 564

May 27, 2020 – Winter Park Florida

Our national nightmare is over, NXT has put Performance Center wrestlers in the crowd so we get some noise other than the building’s air conditioning during matches. The plastic shields seem pointless given that the crowd isn’t wearing masks and they’re certainly not standing far enough from each other to be considered social distancing, but if they make Vince McMahon feel like the visual of them is enough to get some noise during the show then this is the last I’ll complain about it. 

Drake Maverick def. Kushida and Jake Atlas {Group A Round Robin Tournament Finals}
I was worried that the wrestlers in the crowd would just cheer intermittently and never get it together, but we got an NXT chant here, so I’m relieved. I liked this, but I think I would have liked it more had the action been more in line with what had gone on in the tournament. I was hoping to see Atlas help Maverick to put down Kushida because he’s “such a big Maverick fan,” but instead we got a rather traditional three-way. On the bright side, it was a good three-way, with no two-in-one-out nonsense and a lot of great action. The finish was surprising, as Maverick pinned Atlas while Kushida was going for the Sakuraba lock for the win at 7:54 (shown). Atlas was tapping while the referee counted the pin, so look for Kushida to have something to say. Does Maverick have his job back? Also, if Maverick was going to win I wish that they’d instructed the crowd to chant for him during the match. The finals are next week on TV, not on Takeover. No real surprise there. ***¼ 

Johnny Gargano def. Adrian Alanis
Before the match (the first ever Johnny Gargano Invitational), the crowd booed Gargano, which was great because he finally had people to play off of as a heel. I guess EVOLVE guys get full entrances now. Gargano tapped him out in 45 seconds with the GargaNo Escape. After the match, Mia Yim & Keith Lee pop up on the big screen and spoof the Dinner with the Garganos skits. It’s very funny by wrestling standards and suitably critical of wrestling’s metatext. But it ends without a Takeover challenge or an attack, which is a bit of a bummer. N/A

Kushida tells Maverick that they don’t have to have another tiebreaker match, but he wants Maverick to fight to win. Maverick offers Kushida the first shot at the title. That works for me, and now I just wish Maverick was fighting a heel in the finals instead of new babyface El Hijo del Fantasma. Maybe Fantasma will turn heel next week and admit to being behind all the parking lot crime. 

Imperium tells the NXT tag team division that the titles aren’t leaving Imperium, and neither is the NXT UK Championship. Well yeah, WALTER would have to be available for a match. Danny Burch & Oney Lorcan need to stay out of Imperium’s way. 

Raquel Gonzalez def. Shotzi Blackheart
I keep wanting to type “Raquel Diaz,” which is surprising because I didn’t think she’d made any impression on me. These two had a decent feud in EVOLVE, so this had some potential going in. Dakota Kai tries to distract Blackheart by defacing her Tonka Tank, but that’s stopped when Tegan Nox runs out to put an end to that. The match was starting to heat up (Blackheart hit a COffin Drop on Gonzalez and Kai) when Candice LeRae distracted Nox, leaving Kai available to help Gonzalez win with a big slam at 5:42 (shown). I’d be very surprised if Blackheart wasn’t injured off of that Coffin Drop. This wasn’t as good as the no DQ match in EVOLVE, but was probably better than the other two matches they had there. **¾ 

Damian Priest vs. Finn Balor is official for Takeover. Then we get a commercial for said Takeover, complete with VHS tracking lines to help with the In Your House nostalgia. 

Rhea Ripley & Io Shirai def. Charlotte Flair & Chelsea Green
Mauro Ranallo gives a cyber-bullying warning in honor of Hana Kimura during Shirai’s entrance. I don’t think Green, given how she’s been booked to date, warranted mystery partner status. I liked the way Flair was directing traffic for her team, and the way her arrogance led to a friendly fire attack. Shirai and Ripley worked more smoothly as a team than I expected, and this match was a little bop as a result. Of course, the finish saw Shirai crash into Ripley, giving Flair the pin on Shirai with her feet on the ropes at 8:19 (shown). If you didn’t expect that finish the moment the match was announced, you haven’t been watching WWE. ***

Gargano challenges Lee to a North American Championship match at Takeover, and LeRae challenges Yim to a match next week. Kind of surprised they didn’t go with a mixed tag to change things up a bit. 

Adam Cole and NXT General Manager William Regal parlay over Zoom. Cole has put his anniversary celebration on ice because of attacks from the Velveteen Dream. Regal doesn’t like all the whining and wants to get to the point. Cole wants another tag title shot for the Undisputed Era and he wants the Dream to be gone. Regal thinks Dream deserves another shot at the title at Takeover. Cole agrees to it as long as Dream never gets another shot at him while he’s champion. Regal agrees, though it will be in a special setting. No word on what’s going on with the rest of the Undisputed Era or the tag titles at Takeover. I’m guessing a pre-show match between Imperium and the bald brawlers, maybe with Roderick Strong & Bobby Fish thrown in. Speaking of, Burch & Lorcan get a little hype video in which they say they want the tag titles. 

Tommaso Ciampa def. Leon Ruff
I’ve never been a fan of the gimmick where the guys fighting each other in a big match beat up the same jobber. What does it prove? Scarlett comes out and tries to distract Ciampa, but he’s undeterred and beats Ruff in 1:17 with the Fairytale Ending. Karrion Kross shows up on the big screen in black and white to threaten Ciampa while Scarlett stares at him. This feud ain’t workin’ for me. N/A

They’re doing a Prime Target for the men’s and women’s championship matches next week, so it seems the show proper might only be an hour. 

Timothy Thatcher def. Matt Riddle {Fight Pit}
There are several differences between a Fight Pit and a Cage Match. In a Fight Pit you can’t win by pinfall or escape, just knock out or submission. There’s scaffolding all around the top of the cage, there are no ring ropes, and no turnbuckle pads. Kurt Angle is the guest referee. I believe this is the first wholly innovated (if similar to the Lion’s Den, which Beth Phoenix calls out) match NXT has ever put on. Thatcher gets a tooth knocked out by a Riddle kick off of the cage almost immediately, and I’m officially grossed out. He keeps fighting, countering the same kick to an armbar attack after a commercial break. This dude is crazy tough. The match was excellent. Riddle and Thatcher ended up everywhere they were in and above the ring because the match brought them there, not because they brought themselves there through contrivances. The action was gnarly, and Thatcher got a crazy run from the (presumably) outgoing Riddle here. Riddle started picking up speed near the end, but Thatcher dodged a charge and put on a choke for the win at 11:31 (shown). This took all the cool things about their first match and elevated them to something you’d want to seek out. Best NXT match since Takeover in February. ***¾ 

This show is infinitely more watchable with people making noise. I’m very happy WWE took a note from AEW and found that the PR of having wrestlers in the audience isn’t that much worse when you’re already getting crapped on for running shows during the pandemic.