NXT Takeover: War Games 2

November 17, 2018 – Los Angeles, California

Matt Riddle def. Kassius Ohno
This was set to happen on Wednesday’s NXT TV, but Riddle asks for it here and wins the thing in about five seconds. N/A

Shayna Baszler def. Kairi Sane {NXT Women’s Championship 2 Out Of 3 Falls Match}
The first fall ends pretty quickly; after Sane controls for a few moments, Baszlers buddies Jessamyn Duke and Marina Shafir attack Sane. That allows Baszler to get the choke on and win just like she did at Evolution. Sane takes the second fall after slowly retaking control and taking out Baszler’s lackeys, then hitting the Insane Elbow on Baszler. The lackeys attack again during the third fall, but Dakota Kai and Io Shirai even the score. But then moments later Baszler reverses the Insane Elbow to a roll up for the win. This was way more sizzle than steak for my liking. I do like where the story went, but it didn’t make the match particularly entertaining. I also feel like the stipulation got really short shrift here. This is definitely a lower-echelon match for the feud, more on par with the Evolution match than the amazing matches from Brooklyn and Las Vegas. Also, ten minutes for a 2/3 falls match is pretty unforgivable. ***

X-Pac is in the audience, holding a dog that does a really good Jim Ross impression.

Amsterdam Black def. Johnny Gargano
These two were supposed to wrestle twice before. The first time, Gargano was attacked before the match could start. The second attempt happened, but the match was about three-minutes long. This is their first real go-round. What I really liked about this was that Black treated it like a nasty grudge match, but for Gargano it was just something he had to get through to get to his next challenge. That’s perfect for where both characters are right now. They went ahead and had a stupid good match, filled with strikes I’ve never seen before, dodges, blocks and reversals that were so much fun to watch, and a wonderful, satisfying finish for Black. Gargano has now wrestled at 11 Takeovers (more than anyone else) and lost all but two of those matches. ****½

Tommaso Ciampa def. Velveteen Dream {NXT Championship Match}
Dream is looking for a hometown advantage by dressing like Hollywood Hulk Hogan, but purple instead of orange. It’s pretty satisfying watching a black guy satirize the gimmick. What started as a cute mimicking of Hogan’s moves turned into a pinpoint utilization of the moves of Bret Hart and Ric Flair as well in a segment that really blew my mind. From there the match just kept building and building in drama in a way that I really wasn’t expecting, which is pretty dumb since both of these guys are incredible at drama. Watching Dream’s confidence build at the same time as Ciampa’s desperation built was beautiful. I especially liked the part when Ciampa threw a notepad at Mauro Ranallo, distracting him long enough to almost cost him the title. In the end, Dream’s confidence was a bit overdone, as he missed an elbow to the apron and left himself wide open to eat a DDT on the metal partition between the two rings. ****½

Ricochet, Pete Dunne, Hanson & Rowe def. Adam Cole, Roderick Strong, Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly {War Games}
One thing I don’t appreciate about War Games in general is that the pacing of the match tends to meander, regardless of the participants and effort. Said meandering is sort of built-in to the thing, as it gives you the sense that the violence is mindless. I get the appeal, but it’s not really for me. The indy gaga off the top of the cage was a little contrived for me as well. But what is for me is when large swaths of the violence are really well done. The bit with Fish trapping Dunne in the cage with a second padlock was cute. Dunne fighting off all of the Undisputed Era on his own was cool, as was the war of attrition to get to Dunne when the Era was all working together to try to tap him out. The entire finishing sequence, from the reset fight on the metal partition to the final pin, was also really well done. All in all, it was a nice improvement over last year’s match, even if I think they could have tightened it up a bit and cut out five or so minutes of it. Yeah, I’m letting the perfect be the enemy of the good, what of it? ****