NXT Takeover 36

August 22, 2021 – Orlando, Florida

Ridge Holland def. Trey Baxter
I’m not confident we’ll be seeing Baxter in NXT for long, especially after his treatment here. Holland squashed him and put him down with the Northern Grit at 1:46. Holland threatened Timothy Thatcher after the match, as they’ll fight on Tuesday. N/A

Cameron Grimes def. LA Knight {Million Dollar Championship Match}
If Knight had won, Ted DiBiase would become his butler. Grimes has DiBiase-style trunks on. I can’t realistically imagine a better version of this match than what we got. While both previous matches in this feud were a lot of fun, this one brought it all together and amped up the athleticism to boot. Grimes breaking out the Million Dollar Dream was fantastic. DiBiase and Grimes distracting the referee with the belt so that DiBiase could punch Knight and put him in the Million Dollar Dream on the floor got a big pop from me. And the finish came at the perfect time, as Grimes hit the Cave In to the sound of immense crowd support for the win at 16:33. This angle was designed to get Grimes more over, which it did perfectly, but as a byproduct we now know that Knight is well aware of who he is, what he can do, and how he can do it to get the most out of the fans. I’m very impressed. ****

Raquel Gonzalez def. Dakota Kai {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
They should probably rename Kai’s Scorpion Kick, because while it does resemble a scorpion tail, they’ve got Meiko Satomura finishing people with a completely unrelated Scorpion Kick over on NXT UK. I got major joshi vibes from this one, largely because of Gonzalez’s defiant no-selling of a few of Kai’s kicks. This slapped. I saw a couple of medium reviews for this match and I do not understand them. They played off their knowledge of each other, Kai’s scumbaggery, and Gonzalez’s grit. What’s not to like? Gonzalez caught Kai going for a kick, blocked it, and hit a superbomb for the win at 12:28. After the match, Kay Lee Ray showed up on the ramp and made her presence known. ***¾ 

Ilja Dragunov def. WALTER {NXT UK Championship Match}
God damn did this deliver. They worked a less horrifying style than they did last October, spending the first five minutes trading gnarly holds on the mat before any bombs were thrown. Then, they threw bombs. But not as many as they did when they were fighting in front of no crowd. I appreciate that. Here, they had fans cheering on everything they did, so there wasn’t a need to lay it in as stiff. That’s not to say they strayed from that completely, as Dragunov still left the ring covered in blisters. But they were able to incorporate Dragunov’s triggered rage storyline and believably have him break down and tap out WALTER. There are few pairs of guys who have delivered as consistently at the high level these two have against each other . Dragunov locked WALTER in a sleeper hold and viciously wore him down until WALTER tapped at 22:04. Dragunov standing with his foot over WALTER in celebration was a perfect way to end the big man’s reign. Apropos of everything, WALTER was in the best physical shape I’ve ever seen him in here. *****

Kyle O’Reilly def. Adam Cole {Three Stages of Hell Match}
O’Reilly’s entrance music has grown on me. He won the first fall, a standard match, in about three and a half minutes with a roll up counter to the Panama Sunrise. Thirteen minutes later, Cole won the street fight fall by throwing O’Reilly off of the top onto the backs of two chairs and then hitting the Last Shot. That went about 13 minutes and was a lot more fun than their unsanctioned match. Keeping things tighter at one-third the length certainly helped. Cole injured O’Reilly’s ribs so O’Reilly never had good footing. It was pretty dope. The cage match saw Cole arrogantly take his time, setting up big, dramatic exclamation marks for his victory. But O’Reilly quietly waited to pick his spot. He did that first by ducking a Last Shot and hitting the move on Cole. And he did it to win the match by, while handcuffed to the ropes, catching Cole’s superkick and putting on a heel hook for the win at 25:23. I like their Great American Bash match best, but this also blew their In Your House match out of the water and was filled with a ton of great moments. It’s kind of a miracle that the NXT UK match could be followed by something excellent. ****

Samoa Joe def. Karrion Kross {NXT Championship Match}
Scarlett is missing, which I guess serves her right since she killed NXT. This is Joe’s first match in a year and a half, and his first NXT match in four and a half years. As much of a bummer it is to see Kross move through Takeover main events as if he’s got a gurney strapped to his back, it was that much fun to watch Joe bring maximum effort to send the fans home happy. This had zero chance of measuring up to what came before it, but it had Joe leaping five feet in the air to kick Kross on the top rope. Thank god for this old man. He hit the Muscle Buster for the win and the title at 12:26. ***

If this is the end of Takeover, or even just the end of Takeover as we know it, they gave us a great show for it. It may be a reflection of the low expectations I had for this show given the slow and steady decline in quality since the pandemic started, but every match had a babyface go over and every match either met or exceeded my standards going in.