September 23, 2020 – Winter Park, Florida
Candice LeRae def. Rhea Ripley, Shotzi Blackheart, Xia Li, Aliyah, Jessi Kamea, Kayden Carter, Raquel Gonzalez, Dakota Kai, Gia, Kacy Catanzaro, Catalina, Marina Shafir, Raeven, Ellie, Brandi Lauren, Avery Taylor, Rita Reis, Emily Andzulis, and Indi Hartwell {Number One Contender Battle Royal}
LeRae attacked Nox’s knee backstage before the match. This is the debut for a lot of women who are annoyingly barely named by the commentators. A lot of this was bad battle royal business. The story here was that Ripley and Gonzalez were tossing everyone and that Catanzaro was doing cool Kofi Kingston-style stuff to avoid elimination. There was some cute stuff done during the commercial break in the inset, which is frustrating because none of it will appear when the show pops up on the Network. Ripley and Gonzalez eliminated each other, which left the door open for LeRae to win the thing. LeRae last eliminated Blackheart at 11:33 (shown of 15:09). Outside of the Catanzaro stuff, there wasn’t much to get excited for here. **½
Damien Priest will be facing Johnny Gargano for the NXT North American Championship at Takeover 31. Priest isn’t sweating it, nor is he worried about facing Austin Theory later. Another woman is subbing in for McKenzie Mitchell tonight. Mitchell’s boyfriend Vic Joseph and his broadcast partner Wade Barrett are off the show tonight too. There’s reportedly been a COVID outbreak in NXT. That is all. Later, Fandango is dressed as Sherlock Holmes because he discovered a funky mixed partner tag tournament to decide the next contenders to the tag titles. Danny Burch translates Fandango’s fake British into cockney slang for NXT GM William Regal to understand. Cute, if AEWish. Also kind of dumb, as the winning team never prove anything as a team. Hard not to assume this is to cover up for some COVID-related absences.
Tommaso Ciampa def. Jake Atlas
This was more interesting than Ciampa’s squash of Atlas a few weeks ago. Atlas got some fun offense in, but in the end it was still the Ciampa show. He hit the Willow’s Bell, but then taunted Atlas before hitting the Fairy Tale Ending for the win at 4:48. **¼
Roderick Strong & Danny Burch def. Fabian Aichner & Raul Mendoza
The winners of this match will face each other to determine which team fights for the tag titles. This was a very surprising outcome, as I was sure Legado del Fantasma was getting the shot. Again, this makes me think that Joaquin Wilde is out of action for a bit. Also surprising, the match was pretty fun. Burch put Mendoza away with the hanging DDT at 6:36 (shown of 9:08). I’m into Strong vs. Burch, and I genuinely don’t know who would win. I know that Breezango vs. Oney Lorcan & Burch isn’t the sexiest Takeover match, but I’d be down to watch it. ***
Gargano approaches Theory because he sees something of himself in the guy. Yikes. He’s also not mad that Theory could soften up Priest before Takeover.
Damian Priest def. Austin Theory
I know this isn’t intentional, but Theory’s logo looks pretty KKKish. This was fine but felt totally inconsequential. I mean, it’s good for them to build up Priest before Takeover, but they accomplished that well enough with the Thatcher match last week. I’m not mad at seeing Priest win, I just wish they’d fill TV time with something a bit more enticing. Priest hit the Reckoning at 7:27 (shown of 11:06) for the win. Gargano superkicks Priest after the match. Why did Gargano get this title shot? **½
Someone with night vision goggles is shown stealing a title belt, and then the date of Takeover is shown on the screen. Sure, why not? Also, Isaiah Scott reminds us that he has two pinfall victories over Santos Escobar and wants another title shot.
Ridge Holland def. Antonio de Luca
Just a squash. Holland hit the Northern Grit for the win at 1:32. N/A
The Garganos approach Io Shirai during a backstage promo. Priest walks up and lays out Johnny. They’ll fight in a mixed tag match next week. Yep, that’s the pattern with the Garganos. Also, Blackheart and Kai will fight next week because one of them eliminated the other in the opener. I already forget which.
Kyle O’Reilly def. Cameron Grimes, Timothy Thatcher, Kushida, and Bronson Reed {Number One Contender Gauntlet Eliminator Match}
O’Reilly and Kushida start. Someone new comes in every four minutes. Eliminations can only happen via pin and submission. There’s some fine mat wrestling to start, but there’s nobody in the stands and the crowd noise is faked (and weirdly quiet just like on NXT UK), so it’s a little flat. Reed comes out next. They do some neat three way spots, but also fall victim to the self-defeating pin and submission breakups. Velveteen Dream interferes and hits Kushida with the Dream Valley Driver, and a seemingly clueless Reed hits Kushida with the Tsunami to eliminate him about eight minutes in. Thatcher is out next but they almost immediately go to commercial. When they come back, Grimes comes out. Reed missed a Tsunami and O’Reilly hit him with a diving kneedrop for the elimination about 22 minutes in. He pinned Thatcher with a roll up a few minutes later. The staggered entrance gimmick feels pretty empty with so few guys. They didn’t play into Grimes having an advantage over anyone else enough, though I’m glad it came down to him vs. O’Reilly in the end. That aside, the match was crazy dope. Everyone fought hard as hell, all of the action was a blast, and O’Reilly’s persistence was a great throughline for the match. He picked up the win at 21:50 (shown of 27:51) with a leglock. Adam Cole and Strong come out to congratulate O’Reilly after the match, and Finn Balor comes out to stare his new opponent down. I don’t understand what the point was of putting O’Reilly between Ciampa and Atlas last week and dropping it pretty much completely here, but I suppose they could always revisit it (though I doubt they will). It would be very easy to make O’Reilly a big deal on the strength of this match. ****¼