June 7, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida
Todd Pettingill hosts the very ‘90s intro for the show. Sadly, the band Code Orange puts an end to the fun with their crappy metal song for NXT Loud. At least they use the original set on the ramp. It wouldn’t be a WWE production unless they completely whiffed on some aspect of the show, I guess, but there are modern bands who play throwback music. Get Charlie Bliss on my screen and get this out of here.
Candice LeRae, Tegan Nox & Raquel Diaz def. Tegan Nox, Shotzi Blackheart & Raquel Gonzalez
Happy to see that Blackheart wasn’t injured in that TV match. Also dope to see her use the Cattle Mutilation in this match. I wonder if anyone would have noticed that Diaz is cosplaying as Chyna if Beth Phoenix hadn’t said so on commentary. Kind of funny that she and Nox are going for a Chyna/HHH thing instead of a Diesel/HBK thing. This was fast-paced and fun in the same way bumper cars are fun. Nothing looked too brutal but it’s a good time nonetheless. It also lasted just the right amount of time and got out while I was still having fun. LeRae and Yim brawled to the back, and Nox hit Kai with the Shining Wizard for the win at 9:31. ***¼
Finn Balor def. Damian Priest
Priest put on his fancy tights for this one, which I believe are modeled after Rhea Ripley’s old pants. The Performance Center folks in the crowd have the chanting and clapping down more tonight than they had to date, which is nice. Here I realize that the tradeoff for the fun nostalgia is a constant hard-sell for the WWE Network to watch previous In Your House PPVs. Don’t you have to have the Network already to watch this show? This match was Balor controlling with quick offensive flurries vs. Priest doing the same with devastating power moves. I don’t appreciate Ranallo trying to rename the Jon Woo dropkick here. Balor won by hitting the Coup de Gras twice at 13:11. A crazy bump onto the steps helps this one creep up to just a bit more memorable than I expected it to be. Balor becomes the winningest Takeover competitor with this match. ***½
Adam Cole stars in an ICOPRO commercial. Not who you’d expect given its legacy.
Keith Lee def. Johnny Gargano {NXT North American Championship Match}
Gargano’s entrance featured references to Doc Hendrix, 69 (nice), and the house giveaway. That’s efficient. Now that he’s a heel he’s a stormtrooper instead of a superhero. He also lives in the In Your House set, so that’s a fun bit of trivia for you. Lee has BLM tights on, so if he doesn’t win I’m taking a break from NXT. I saw someone complaining that Lee wasn’t wearing an eyepatch here, as if you can’t get the idea that his eye is vulnerable after Gargano’s Wednesday attack from Gargano targeting it and the commentators talking about it. How dumb are wrestling fans? Very dumb; I’m sorry for wasting everyone’s time by asking. This match had a similar structure to the previous one, but Gargano is better than Balor (yep) and this match had a babyface. It also had Lee throwing Gargano through the spit guard into the crowd and a great near fall after Gargano pulled a key from his tights and jammed it into Lee’s eye again. Lee kicked out of a half dozen thrust kicks and won the match with two Spirit Bombs and the Supernova at 20:36. Oh, LeRae tried to interfere and was stopped by Yim too, but that didn’t amount to much. Anyway, this ruled and I don’t see anything else on the show coming close. ****¼
Adam Cole def. Velveteen Dream {NXT Championship Backlot Brawl}
There’s a ring set up outside. Cole arrives in a monster truck and Dream in a Lamborghini, dressed as Negan from the Walking Dead. The ground is wet because this was rain delayed until like one in the morning, according to the always accurate online rumors (I think the rumors are true in this case). This thankfully has commentary and a crowd (cheering from their cars with headlights on), learning from the mistake of the One Last Beat match. Cole’s bump from a ladder onto a car hood was the only thing that couldn’t have happened in Full Sail, and I’m not sure it was worth it. This was more interesting than One Last Beat by virtue of it not being a half hour of punches and kicks, but that’s a low bar. The Undisputed Era and Dexter Lumis got involved, which ended with Lumis puting the boys in the trunk of a car and driving off with them. Cole won with a low blow and the Panama Sunrise on a pile of chairs in 15:00. NXT cinematic matches just aren’t measuring up to the WrestleMania weekend ones. At least they had the good sense not to put it on last. **¾
Karrion Kross def. Tommaso Ciampa
One minute into the match, Kross chokeslammed Ciampa’s neck onto the apron and I don’t understand why the match didn’t end right there. Bright side? Kross mostly dominated, kicked out of Ciampa’s finishers, and won in 6:13 with the Kross Jacket. Pretty squishy, so I’ll call it a success. My rating of the match is basically immaterial because it accomplished what it needed to. **½
Robert Stone is all out of sorts, having been fired by Chelsea Green and unable to find success with Aliyah. Is there any chance this is going somewhere interesting?
Io Shirai def. Rhea Ripley and Charlotte Flair {NXT Women’s Championship Triple Threat Match}
This is the first time the ladies have main evented a Takeover in almost five years. Flair has had the most consistently good empty arena matches of anyone on the roster (along with Seth Rollins), so I expected this to be pretty good with a few folks cheering the match on. Kevin Ford pointed out that Ripley’s asymmetrical contact lenses match her boots, and that seemed worth mentioning here. This was a wild ride. They beat the crap out of one another and strung together a series of really compelling moments. Shirai won the title by hitting a moonsault to Ripley’s goddamn head while Flair was going for the Figure 8. ****¼