December 5, 2021 – Orlando, Florida
I guess just reviewing NXT 2.0’s big shows is tolerable to me. Coming back to review the first 2.0 version of not-Takeover after skipping every episode of NXT since Halloween Havoc has been very good for my health. That said, I almost reviewed the two ladder matches from last week’s episode of NXT because they were the only matches from that entire run that people seemed to like a lot. But I don’t particularly like ladder matches so what would the point be? Main takeaway: this show is still being held together by the 1.0 wrestlers (sorry, it’s the easiest way to refer to them) and it’s going to be an even more brutal rebuilding period if and when they start to defect.
Raquel Gonzalez, Cora Jade, Io Shirai & Kay Lee Ray def. Mandy Rose, Dakota Kai, Jacy Jayne & Gigi Dolin {War Games}
I think it’s kinda neat that the two women in the ladder match are starting the match here. I mostly think it’s neat because they’re two of the most likely to be able to carry more of the match on their own. I’m happy for that, because I think there’s an online deadpool for this match given how loosey goosey so many of the women in it have been since debuting on TV. The crowd is surprisingly split, giving Toxic Attraction a lot of love considering they’re heels and that they’re not great. Shirai came in third for her team and lit things up, bringing some extra life to the match. I’m kind of surprised at how motivated she was here. There’s a neat bit where Jade hit a dive off of the cage onto Jayne and “separated her shoulder.” Her selling was good enough for me to wonder if it was real, but then Shirai “popped it back in.” It worked at getting the crowd behind Jade too. I’m kind of surprised they didn’t do it earlier, given that the babyfaces have weirdly had the advantage the whole time. I thought in the end they’d have the babyfaces working to protect the weakened Jade from being targeted by the heels, and then they did that. So that’s nice. Most of the match passed without being too boring or too exciting, but more importantly it passed without any near deaths. It got more focused when Shirai came in. I very much appreciate a War Games match with a story I can sink my teeth into. The first women’s version had that, and so did this one. Between that and Toxic Attraction not massively screwing anything up, this wound up being a breezy watch. The finish was pretty goofy. Jade was targeted by all four opponents, but got bailed out by her teammates. Everyone got laid out, and Jade was the first to come to her senses. So she casually pinned Jayne at 31:21 for the win. I think Jade could have played the ending a lot better. Still, this was a lot better than anyone sane probably expected. ***½
Josh Briggs & Brooks Jensen play cornhole and grill steaks while spouting some real dumb reductive nonsense about what makes a man. My red meat bonafides are firmly established, and I can tell you that if you don’t eat your steak medium rare (the way I personally like it), that’s just fine. Life is short, eat food that tastes good to you. Then, Boa says that Mei Ying passed her power into him, and he’s having a hard time controlling it. Then, MSK finally found the guy they were looking for back when I was still reviewing the show, but they won’t show who it is until Tuesday. Then, the NXT 1.0 team chats in the locker room while subtly suggesting that this is Gargano’s last match in the company.
Fabian Aichner & Marcel Barthel def. Kyle O’Reilly & Von Wagner {NXT Tag Team Championship Match}
So O’Reilly & Wagner are lumberjacks? I dunno. I liked this match a lot. It had a great energy, and yet it was a rather different than the frantic energy that the ‘18/’19 apex NXT tag team title matches had. Imperium, amazing when they’re in the mood to be, flew around the ring but more importantly wrestled like jerks in a few delightfully dastardly ways. O’Reilly and Wagner made for a solid team, with O’Reilly doing the hard work of disorienting the champs and Wagner saving him with his strength whenever he got in trouble. Wagner could have been any competent big guy, still showing no charisma, but he did the job he was asked to do. And the finish was killer. It saw O’Reilly lock Aichner in an armbar, only to be lifted up and caught with the European Bomb. That gave the champs the win at 14:53. The crowd gave O’Reilly a farewell-worthy ovation after the match, but it’s not quite time for him to leave yet. First, Wagner unsuccessfully attacked him and was left laid out by O’Reilly. O’Reilly threw in an Undisputed Era sign and a few crotch chops for good measure. Putting over Wagner seems a nice way for O’Reilly to go out, though the turn came out of nowhere and didn’t exactly make sense. Hopefully Wagner will say he was mad that the crowd only cheered for O’Reilly. ****
I guess Jacket Time is over, because they replay the Ikemen Jiro Style Strong Ikemansion video that they used when they were initially trying to establish his character back in September. It is the height of laziness to play this again, months later, with no changes. I’d be in disbelief, but there doesn’t seem to be a lot of care going into 2.0 characters. Then, Santos Escobar says he’ll beat Xyon Quinn on Tuesday.
Cameron Grimes def. Duke Hudson {Hair vs. Hair Match}
I like that they used the second ring as a makeshift barber shop, so you can see the stakes of the match throughout the match. They get a lot of mileage out of Grimes’s charisma in matches like these, where the outsized stakes weren’t exactly earned by the poker-centric angle that got them to the match. But I have to say I was disappointed in Hudson. I’ve been looking forward to seeing him perform in a situation like this where he’d get some time to show us who he is. I loved his YouTube series Smug, the Dark Side of the Smug, Trophy Life, and Total Flogs. I liked the way he contrasted the indie wrestlers he worked in EVOLVE. But here, he was sapped of the character traits that make him fun, displaying a big fella who was occasionally surprised that the smaller fella was getting the better of him. I have no problem with NXT focusing on bigger dudes, but now that there are more of them I’d hope that they’d let them perform in a way that allows them to stand out from one another. That didn’t happen here, so what we got was a pretty nondescript match. Grimes won with the Cave In at 10:24. Hudson tried to run, but Grimes caught him and buzzed his hair off. **¾
The Grizzled Young Veterans are street level con artists now. Zack Gibson wants them to use what they’ve learned scamming people as tactics in the ring. Then, Kacy Catanzaro & Kayden Carter are rave girls now, and they want to bring the party to NXT. Everything is so cartoony now! To balance things out, Draco Anthony is just a dude at a diner drinking a cup of coffee. There has to be a middle ground. Then, they announce New Year’s Evil is returning, so that’ll be the next NXT show I watch.
Roderick Strong def. Joe Gacy {NXT Cruiserweight Championship Match}
The story here is that Gacy is too heavy for the division, but he complained about the gatekeeping and goaded Strong into defending the title against him anyway. Everyone complains about Gacy’s gimmick, but I don’t mind the inclusivity shtick half as much as I am mystified by Harland being in his corner with no explanation. This match has no babyfaces, so the crowd is dead for most of it. Remember when Strong had great runs as a babyface title contender against Bryan Danielson in ROH and Bobby Roode in NXT? I miss seeing Strong used that way. Or if he’s going to be a heel, I wish he’d be booked against babyfaces. This match was Tuesday night fodder, and I’d be shocked to find in three months that someone would be able to tell me anything about it. Strong got the win with the End of Heartache at 8:27. **¼
Maybe I shouldn’t have gotten so upset about NXT using old footage to hype Jiro, because next up they show a clip of him ordering too much junk food delivery and taking a giant dump. His delivery is funny but has anything like this ever gotten a wrestler over anywhere? Then, O’Reilly says he smelled the Wagner turn coming from a mile away. He did? Because unless something happened last Tuesday that I didn’t read about it’s not like Wagner showed any signs of discontent with O’Reilly. A cage match between them is coming on Tuesday.
Bron Breakker, Tony D’Angelo, Carmelo Hayes & Grayson Waller def. Tommaso Ciampa, LA Knight, Johnny Gargano & Pete Dunne {War Games}
The crowd gives a big pop to the return of Rebel Heart as Gargano’s entrance song. I want Don’t Die Digging if Gargano pops up elsewhere in 2022. Gargano sells the entrance as if it’s his last match in NXT. The match starts with Gargano and Hayes, giving us a five minute taste of what we would have gotten at Halloween Havoc if someone didn’t feel like a haunted house segment was necessary. There was a lot to like in this match. I enjoyed that even when they were at a disadvantage, the Black & Gold team used their experience edge to stay competitive. I like that the 2.0 team went to nefarious lengths to keep the numbers in their favor for as long as possible, and I like that it was suggested that the decision to do that wasn’t one that was shared with Breakker. Dexter Lumis returning to scare off Trick Williams was fun. The DIY reunion warmed the cockles of my heart. I really liked the bit where the Black & Gold team was beat up in the trench between the rings and followed the lead of Dunne’s “nothing left to do but fight,” shrug. That added some character to the totally played out lineup showdown. Speaking of character, everyone got at least one little character moment. Even D’Angelo, who was feeling superfluous for a lot of the match, locked the cage, used his crowbar, and stole Dunne’s mouthguard by the time all was said and done. Finally, I felt like the pacing of the “match beyond” portion was a lot better here than it was last year, where the match just kept going and going because teams would become exhausted, recuperate, and fight all as a group multiple times without going for pins. Here, they still weren’t looking to actually win the match often enough, but even though it took up half of the match time the portion with everyone in the ring flowed well. Breakker finished off Ciampa with the press powerslam at 38:11. ****
Well, this show decidedly did not suck, and would have made for a good, if not stellar, Takeover. At the very least, I’ll be tuning in Tuesday for Gargano’s announcement and the cage match, and I’ll be back to review New Year’s Evil. There have now been eight NXT War Games matches. Given that there are traditionally eight participants in War Games and that I’m not sure I’ll review this show again next year (if it even happens), I’m putting out my top eight list here:
- Rhea Ripley, Dakota Kai, Candace LeRae & Tegan Nox vs. Shayna Baszler, Bianca Belair, Io Shirai & Kay Lee Ray {War Games 2019}
- Tommaso Ciampa, Keith Lee, Dominic Dijakovic & Kevin Owens vs. Adam Cole, Kyle O’Reilly, Bobby Fish & Roderick Strong {War Games 2019}
- Candice LeRae, Raquel Gonzalez, Dakota Kai & Toni Storm vs. Shotzi Blackheart, Io Shirai, Rhea Ripley & Ember Moon {War Games 2020} 4.25
- Bron Breakker, Tony D’Angelo, Carmelo Hayes & Grayson Waller vs. Tommaso Ciampa, LA Knight, Johnny Gargano & Pete Dunne {War Games 2021}
- Ricochet, Pete Dunne, Hanson & Rowe vs. Adam Cole, Roderick Strong, Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly {War Games 2018} 4
- Adam Cole, Kyle O’Reilly, Roderick Strong & Bobby Fish vs. Pete Dunne, Oney Lorcan, Danny Burch & Pat McAfee {War Games 2020} 3.75
- Adam Cole, Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly vs. Eric Young, Killian Dain & Alexander Wolfe vs. Roderick Strong, Akam & Rezar {War Games 2017}
- Dakota Kai, Cora Jade, Io Shirai & Kay Lee Ray vs. Mandy Rose, Dakota Kai, Jacy Jayne & Gigi Dolin {War Games 2021}
And finally, if this is Gargano’s last match in NXT, it just confirms that he had a ****¼ average match rating throughout his 23 Takeover appearances (which doesn’t change if you add this match and/or his match against Dunne in Houston on a Takeover pre-show). He’s just not touchable when it comes to NXT’s history.