April 2, 2020 – Dallas, Texas
Dakota Kai & Raquel Gonzalez def. Gigi Dolin & Jacy Jayne {NXT Women’s Tag Team Championship Match}
This was on the kickoff show. Kai and Gonzalez had reunited days earlier on NXT TV in a somewhat heartwarming moment. I guess the reunion healed Kai’s mental illness. It’s almost comforting when wrestling is regressive because at least it’s familiar. There are still a LOT of empty seats at this point. You know Toxic Attraction isn’t over because when Kai kicked out of their tag team finisher the crowd didn’t react at all. Wendy Choo shows up and hits Dolin with a pillow. Gonzalez hits Jayne with the Chingona Bomb for the win at 7:53. The only problem with this match is that the crowd didn’t care at all. Toxic Attraction appear to be at least competent in the ring now. **¼
Cameron Grimes def. Carmelo Hayes, Grayson Waller, Solo Sikoa, and Santos Escobar {NXT North American Championship Ladder Match}
They mention over and over that Grimes dedicated this match to his late father, which kind of gave away the game before it began. That said, WWE isn’t afraid to let the babyface lose when it makes way more sense for him to win. Hayes has Trick Williams in his corner, helping him out from time to time. I believe this is the largest audience any of these guys has ever performed in front of. Except maybe Escobar, depending on how sold out this show is, as the building capacity here is greater than the arenas in Mexico (and AAA doesn’t seem to have been completely selling out their PPVs in the last few years). Legado del Fantasma and Sanga get involved in the only part of the match that is any different from all the other multi-man ladder matches we’ve seen over the last decade. I did like the last few minutes of the match, though Waller’s now infamous airball elbowdrop onto a ladder was a rough shot. Grimes grabbed the title at 21:01 after hitting Escobar with the Cave In, which came after Escobar hit Hayes with the Phantom Driver. At least it made sense for Waller (missed elbowdrop) and Sikoa (had somewhat recently been hit with the Cave In on ladders on the apron) to be out of commission, so there’s that. ***½
Tony D’Angelo def. Tommaso Ciampa
D’Angelo is accompanied by AJ Galante, a tabloid personality so obscure that Wade Barrett actually tells us to google him. That’s pretty lame. A Ciampa career retrospective plays just before his entrance, signaling that this is his last NXT match. Why are they giving away the endings to the matches before they happen? This is my first time hearing Ciampa’s new music, and while it’s not as good as No One Will Survive, it’s totally fine. Ciampa pays Umaga to the recently retired Triple H during the entrance. There might have been an angle building to this match, but really it’s just a way for Ciampa to give a new guy a boost on his way to Raw (Smackdown?). Ciampa burns his finishers, as D’Angelo kicks out of Willow’s Bell and the Fairytale Ending, hit consecutively. D’Angelo hits a DDT on the exposed floor and a boot to the side of the head at 13:12. That was a depressing finish to a whatever match. Ciampa gets a standing ovation and a hug from Triple H on his way to the back. **¾
Wes Lee & Nash Carter def. Fabian Aichner & Marcel Barthel and Julius Creed & Brutus Creed {NXT Tag Team Championship Triple Threat Match}
The logic of having MSK in this match because the Creeds were attacked before their scheduled title shot weeks ago doesn’t work. There’s a bigger quality gap from Imperium’s old to new entrance music than there was from Ciampa’s. It’s still weird to hear the commentators call WALTER Gunther. This was good n’ fun, and in my opinion a lot more economical than the ladder match earlier in the night. I’m obviously biased against ladder matches, but I found this to be just as exciting. There’s just so much more you can do when you have a spotty match that hinges on near falls instead of awkward and unconvincing climbing up a ladder. Brutus’s cannonball dive was WILD, as was the European Bomb on the floor. MSK hit Barthel with a Frankensteiner/powerbomb combo for the win at 11:22. ***¾
Joe Gacy, with Harlan, cuts a promo from the site of John F. Kennedy’s assasination and says basically hot nonsense. I know it’s meant to be creepy, but I just had it and don’t want to see more of it. Later, a poll of the sexiest couple in NXT reveals that InDex beat Persia Pirotta and Duke Hudson by 77 points. You don’t usually get landslides like that in today’s polarized atmosphere. Seems like a mixed tag match is in the works.
Mandy Rose def. Cora Jade, Io Shirai, and Kay Lee Ray {NXT Women’s Championship Four Way Match}
Speaking of things I hate, Shirai & KLR won the Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic and then used that contract to… get spots in a singles title match? I hate it so goddamn much. Jade’s entrance includes some dudes skateboarding around the ramp. Why not bring out a halfpipe so they can, you know, do something cool rather than just slowly skating back and forth? KLR comes out next with nothing but a baseball bat and looks a lot cooler. I don’t even like KLR’s entrance music, but her Tron video made her look important. Rose does a reverse Undertaker, where the podium brings her down from up high while angel wings appear behind her on the Tron. Pretty neat. The match was fine, I guess. The premise of the match was lame, and if Shirai wasn’t going to win then I don’t think anyone really cared about the outcome. I say that based on the lack of response that Rose, KLR, and Jade got for their near falls. Well, that’s not fair, Rose (the heel) had a solid amount of support. The trouble there is that Jade trying to win the title was the throughline of the match. Everyone worked pretty hard though, and it was a breezy watch. KLR knocked out Jade with the Gory Bomb, and then Shirai hit Jade with the moonsault, but Rose blasted Shirai with a knee kick for the win at 13:28. ***¼
Gunther def. LA Knight
Gunther doesn’t seem particularly thrilled with his new music either, but then again he’s never been the most expressive guy. The crowd chants WALTER for a second during his entrance. Gunther losing all this weight reminds me of the bit in the Between Two Ferns interview with Steve Carell where Galifianakis cries about how the Jews in Hollywood wanted him to stay fat and unhealthy so he’d remain funny. Jokes about Jewish control of institutions aside, I feel a little guilty as a Jew who kinda misses fat WALTER. Luckily, he’s still dope as hell in the ring. Knight pulled out a Burning Hammer, but as we know from Gunther’s matches against Trent Seven, that won’t pin him. Gunther replies with a lariat, the Superfly Splash, and a powerbomb for the win at 10:24. Fun destruction from Gunther. ***¼
Dolph Ziggler def. Bron Breakker {NXT Championship Match}
I was kind of surprised that Rick Steiner didn’t come out with Breakker since they’re overtly acknowledging the relationship, but given how the match played out it makes sense that he wouldn’t. Ziggler did come out with Robert Roode, but the ref ejects Roode early on. Ziggler kicks out of the spear, at which Barrett has a conniption fit on commentary. But that’s not Breakker’s finisher. Then, Roode comes back out to save Ziggler after Breakker does hit his real finisher, the press powerslam. Barrett correctly questions why Ziggler isn’t disqualified at that point. What’s the point of doing the throw-out spot if he’s just gonna come back out. That ref is buried. Being distracted by Roode leaves Breakker open to the Famouser and Zig Zag, but that doesn’t end the match. Neither does a flying elbowdrop. Breaker recovers, but ZIggler counters the powerslam to a shove into the exposed turnbuckle and a superkick for the win at 16:13. It was super weird for Breakker to lose here just so he could win in front of a bigger TV audience on Raw, and it made the end of the match almost as much of a bummer as D’Angelo’s win over Ciampa. The rest of the match was about as good as you’re likely to get out of Breakker right now, though. ***½
A solid show, helped a lot by the big crowd, but nowhere near the Takeover arena shows. I waited three days to watch this show, as there was almost no buzz coming out of Dallas on NXT. Here’s hoping they do these big shows in front of different crowds more often so that the new projects like Breakker and D’Angelo can improve their crowd work. Right now, it still feels like we’re at the very beginning of a rebuilding period.