July 27, 2021 – Orlando, Florida
Pete Dunne & Oney Lorcan def. Timothy Thatcher & Tommaso Ciampa
This was rockin’ and rollin’ before the disappointing, abrupt finish. Yes, it’s cool that Ridge Holland is able to walk and that he’s returned. And it’s also cool that he’s returned to align with the crew he was with before his absence, which wasn’t a given. But I’d have enjoyed a real finish to this bop of a match. After the distraction, Dunne caught Ciampa with the Bitter End for the win at 9:24 (shown). The trio continues beating up Ciampa & Thatcher after the match. ***¼
Carmelo Hayes is ready for the Breakout Tournament. Hit Row is ready for Legado del Fantasma. Later, Josh Briggs is ready for Hayes, and Cameron Grimes has fun with LA Knight on the golf course.
Samoa Joe comes to the ring and sets up a table with a contract on it. He calls out William Regal and asks him not to fire Karrion Kross for the attack last week. He suggests that instead, he quits as Regal’s muscle and gets re-signed as a wrestler so he can fight Kross for the title. Regal makes it all so. Joe is so much more charismatic than almost everyone else on the roster and the gulf is so wide that it’s almost a problem.
Carmelo Hayes def. Josh Briggs {Quaterfinal Match}
Vic Joseph finally confirms, three weeks into the tournament, that the winner gets a title shot of their choosing. Duke Hudson sat in on commentary, largely looking past both wrestlers in the ring when asked who he’d prefer to face in the semifinals. Briggs was a little less useless than usual, providing a decent base for Hayes’s acrobatic antics. I’m very happy to see that Hayes is still using the Torbellino to set up his diving axe kick finisher. He hit them both for the win at 7:28 (shown). **½
Last week, Frankie Monet and Jessi Kamea threatened to go after the tag titles. The KCs rolled up and told them to keep dreaming. Robert Stone’s place in this angle is on very shaky ground and he seems to be unbalanced. Then, Ted DiBiase approaches Grimes on the golf course and tells Grimes to stand up for himself. Later, Adam Cole calls Bronson Reed a hanger on. Later still, Zoey Stark wants to be friends with her tag partner Io Shirai, but Shirai doesn’t like her and isn’t interested. She’ll reluctantly hang with Stark though. High hopes for this as the out-of-building skits have been pretty good lately. After that, Mandy Rose looks to be recruiting the lady jobbers.
Raquel Gonzalez & Dakota Kai come out for a chat. Gonzalez brags about her place on top of the women’s division. Kai talks her up and lists all the women Gonzalez has left in her wake. Then she asks anyone in the back to come out and challenge Gonzalez. Then she turns on the champ. How could she have known that no one would come out? The crowd reacted well to this, but I can think of three scenarios off of the top of my head that would have been more interesting turns for Kai than this was.
Kacy Catanzaro & Kayden Carter def. Frankie Monet & Jessi Kamea
Jake Ziegler brought this to my attention last week and it’s true as the day is long on a west Michigan summer day (because that part of Michigan should really be in the central time zone but is in the eastern time zone for dumb reasons, causing a very late sunset), and that is just how much they’ve botched Monet’s run so far. The backstage stuff has been fine, but her squashes have been super dull and now she’s been pinned by this lower card tag team. I was never blown away by her Lucha Underground stuff, and I think they should have just debuted her on the main roster as part of Miz & John Morrison’s act to cover for the fact that she’s not what gets over in NXT. After a very short match, Stone tries to throw his shoe to her to use as a weapon, but that just distracts her and the KCs hit their tandem finisher for the win at 3:28. That thing needs a name. *¼
Wade Barrett interviewed Roderick Strong & Malcolm Bivens. Strong says he quit after the Undisputed Era ended because he didn’t know how to break through the drama to be at peak performance. Bivens called him and turned that all around. Barrett wants to see Strong vs. Bobby Fish, and Bivens wants to deliver that match. It’s happening next week. Strong is still a weak talker, so this partnership is good but Bivens should have handled more of that. Then, we see the announcement that WALTER vs. Ilja Dragunov for the NXT UK title will happen at Takeover. So it’s an Austrian fighting a Russian for a British title in America.
Marcel Barthel & Fabian Aichner def. Top Dolla & Ashante Adonis
Lots of tag matches tonight. This was the Dolla show. He was the only one who got a chance to showcase his stuff, and his stuff is pretty cool. Pretty neat. Pretty swell. I like it. What I don’t like is the crap distraction finish mostly because we already had one of those on this show. Legado del Fantasma comes out to attack Isaiah Scott, which distracts Dolla, which leaves Adonis open to fall victim to the European Bomb at 8:54 (shown). Hit Row fights off LdF after the match. I believe the inevitable Scott vs. Santos Escobar match will be only the second time in NXT history that the same two guys have had singles matches for two separate titles (obviously not including title vs. title matches). Keith Lee defended the North American title and the NXT title against Dominik Dijakovic, and I think no other pair has done this. **¼
The Way is reeling due to the absence of Austin Theory. Indi Hartwell is delivered a hand drawn picture of the Way with Dexter Lumis in the place of Theory. Johnny Gargano hates it. Hartwell suggests that Gargano fights Lumis with a stipulation. If Gargano wins, Hartwell has to drop the Lumis crush. If Lumis wins, Gargano has to give Lumis a chance. Then, the Grizzled Young Veterans have caught up to the millionaires on the golf course. They bet $20K on who can sink the next shot. Grimes wins for his team, but takes out Knight’s nuts and consciousness in the process. Knight frames the GYV for the attack. These skits are gold. Make Grimes NXT Champion now!
Adam Cole def. Bronson Reed
I like both of these guys a lot but this match is meaningless and the fact that it’s the main event of a taped show made this episode feel skippable. It was perfectly fine, fun even, but I never got emotionally invested and I doubt anyone else did either. Reed missed the Tsunami and Cole hit him with the Last Shot for the win at 8:59. After the match, O’Reilly ran out and attacked Cole, finally giving him a receipt for the brainbuster on the steel steps. Takeover is actually shaping up to be very good. ***