Sunday 6 December 2020

WWE NXT Takeoevr War Games 2020 Full Show Live Streaming HD WWE NXT Takeover war Games 2020 Highlights

 

WWE NxT TakeOver : Wargames 2020 PPV July



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WWE NXT WarGames 2020 Results: Winners, Grades, Reaction and Highlights

Sana Ejaz Khan

    Credit: WWE.com

    War was hell for the top stars of NXT Sunday night at TakeOver: War Games, where Team Shotzi and Team Candice sought to settle their differences in the most barbaric gimmick match in professional wrestling, while Undisputed Era looked to silence the loudmouth pat macfee and his associates Pete Dunne, Danny Burch and Oney Lorcan.

    Those two matches, taking place inside two rings surrounded by two unforgiving steel cages, headlined a live special that also featured the culmination of top rivalries, hard-hitting in-ring action and storyline developments that propelled the brand forward as 2020 comes to an end.

    Who emerged victoriously and what did it mean for the immediate future of the brand? Find out with this recap of the December 6 live event spectacular. 

Match Card

1 OF 5

    Announced for Sunday's WWE Network special are:

        

    • War Games: Team Shotzi (Shotzi Blackheart, Io Shirai, Ember Moon and Rhea Ripley) vs. Team Candice (Candice LeRae, Dakota Kai, Raquel Gonzalez and Toni Storm)
    • War Games: Undisputed Era (Adam Cole, Bobby Fish, Kyle O'Reilly and Roderick Strong) vs. Pat McAfee, Pete Dunne, Oney Lorcan and Danny Burch
    • Triple Threat Match for the North American Championship: Leon Ruff vs. Damian Priest vs. Johnny Gargano
    • Leather Strap Match: Dexter Lumis vs. Cameron Grimes
    • Tommaso Ciampa vs. Timothy Thatcher

        

    Coverage begins at 7:00 PM.

Women's War Games Match: Team Blackheart vs. Team Candice

2 OF 5

    Credit: WWE.com

    Appropriately, TakeOver: War Games kicked off with the namesake match featuring the most talented women’s division in professional wrestling. Team Candice’s Toni Storm, Dakota Kai, Raquel Gonzalez and captain Candice LeRae battled Team Blackheart’s Rhea Ripley, Io Shirai, Ember Moon and captain Shotzi Blackheart in a match months in the making.

    By way of Blackheart’s win on Wednesday, the babyfaces held the rare one-woman advantage. Shotzi emerged from the locker room on a brand new tank, rebuilding it after LeRae ran it over a few weeks back.

    Moon and Kai started the match for their respective teams, further intensifying their own rivalry.

    Kai weathered the storm of Moon first, raking her face into the mat, but the arrival of Blackheart (toolbox in-hand) brought with it a two-on-one disadvantage for the heels. She found herself on the shoulders of Moon, then flat on the mat following a dropkick from Blackheart. 

    Gonzalez joined the fray next, overpowering both babyfaces and bowling over them with clothesline and big boots. A slam to Moon gave way to a powerbomb into the cage on Blackheart as Gonzalez wreaked havoc. 

    With the help of Gonzalez, Kai launched herself from one ring to the next, wiping out Moon and Blackheart with a double clothesline. 

    Ripley entered the match and immediately came face-to-face with Gonzalez. With Moon and Blackheart immobilizing the heel, Ripley rocked her with a pump kick. A pair of clotheslines and a ripcord dropkick flattened Kai as the Aussie rolled.

    Ripley opened up the toolbox, retrieved a mallet and blasted Kai with it. She strapped in the arms of Captain Kota and womanhandled her right into the cage. Again, Ripley and Gonzalez teed off on each other, the titans of the division engaging in a relentless brawl. 

    Storm entered next for Team Candice and retrieved a handful of kendo sticks. After working on a turnbuckle pad, she joined Gonazlez in punishing Ripley with the stick. She whipped Ripley into the exposed turnbuckle, driving the air out of her in the process.

    All six women in the match came together for a stereo tower of doom spots, leaving the competitors laid out on the mat. Just in time for NXT Women’s Champion Shirai to enter the battle, bringing a ladder with her.

    Gonzalez prevented Shirai from entering, kicking the door back into The Genius of the Sky and knocking her off the apron. Repeatedly, Gonzalez prevented Shirai from entering the match, despite eating a dropkick that drove a chair into her head. 

    LeRae finally entered the match, but came face-to-face with Shirai. Luckily for her, Indi Hartwell attacked from out of nowhere, leaving Shirai lying on the floor. She locked the door to the cage and stuck the key in her shirt, making it difficult for Shirai to enter the squared circle.

    In the ring, the heels took turns pummeling Blackheart with kendo stick shots, obliterating her. LeRae tried for the pin but the referee refused, citing the fact that not all eight competitors had actually entered the ring.

    Shirai, with a garbage can over her head, launched herself off the top of the cage and wiped out all other competitors as War Games officially began.

    The babyfaces came together to unleash hell on the opposition, punishing them one-by-one en route to a moonsault by Shirai to Gonzalez. The LeRae and Co. broke up the pin, though, ensuring the bout would continue.

    Blackheart and Moon trapped Storm in a double submission, but LeRae broke it up. Blackheart unloaded on the heels with a kendo stick until a chair shot from Kai halted her momentum. She followed up with a big kick to Shirai, followed by a top-rope double stomp into the trash can, driving it into the body of the women’s champion. 

    Moon delivered an Eclipse onto two chairs but Storm broke it up with a trash can. Toni delivered Storm Zero to Moon onto a trash can, but Shirai narrowly broke up the fall.

    LeRae wiped out Ripley, but was knocked off a ladder. Blackheart delivered the senton, back came back-first into a well-place chair positioned expertly by LeRae. Shirai delivered a moonsault onto Kai but Storm speared Ripley into the champion, breaking up the pin.

    Shirai tried to deliver a headscissors onto Gonzalez, between the rings, but the unstoppable force powerbombed her through a ladder and scored the win for Team Candice.

         

    Result

    Team Candice defeated Team Blackheart

        

    Grade

    A

        

    Analysis

    Wade Barrett pointed out that Gonzalez’s victory elevated her from the insurance policy to a genuine threat in the women’s division, and he is absolutely right. If the war with Ripley a month ago was not enough, this match served as her coming out party.

    Gonzalez was a star here, overwhelming the competition and obliterating anyone in her path en route to the defining victory of her young career. Do not be surprised for a moment if she channels this win into an NXT Women’s Championship victory over Shirai somewhere in the near future.

    Major props to Dakota Kai, who was very much the glue that held this one together, taking big bumps and popping up just in time to stay relevant throughout, despite being one of the first two competitors into the match.

    While some would insist the babyface team should go over, none of the participants on that side of the match loses anything in defeat. They were all established, while the heels needed a big win to set up challengers for Shirai. The finish was the right call and now, the NXT women’s division has yet another star it can build around.

    Great booking, creative violence and strong performances from the performers involved help make this a fantastic way to kick things off. A late-surging challenger to NXT Match of the Year, for sure.

Tommaso Ciampa vs. Timothy Thatcher

3 OF 5

    Credit: WWE.com

    In what promised to be one of the most physical matches of the night, Tommaso Ciampa battled Timothy Thatcher. The Blackheart of NXT sought revenge for an assault that left him unconscious just five days earlier. 

    Ciampa controlled early but Thatcher quickly turned the match into a ground-and-pound display of joint manipulation and physical punishment. He targeted the throat of Ciampa, which is where doctors entered while operating on his neck.

    Ciampa attempted to mount a comeback but Thatcher caught him with a slap to the side of the throat. The competitors threw hard rights and lefts at each other moments later but a collision to heads left both reeling. 

    The former NXT Champion finally strung together a flurry of offense and brought Thatcher off the top rope with a superplex. The fight spilled to the floor, then back into the ring, where Ciampa applied a tight headlock, looking to sap the fight out of Thatcher. Blood poured from his ear but the mat magician refused to quit.

    He instead answered with a side suplex, then a German, a sadistic look across his face. Thatcher teased a German suplex on the apron while Ciampa sold his injured neck, but The Blackheart fought out. As Thatcher tried to re-enter the ring, Ciampa tried for the draping DDT. Thatcher, instead, hung him up on the top rope.

    Ciampa recovered, applied a guillotine in the ropes and turned it into Willow’s Bell for the pinfall victory.

        

    Result

    Ciampa defeated Thatcher

         

    Grade

    A

       

    Analysis

    If you like good, hard-hitting and incredibly physical pro wrestling, Ciampa and Thatcher gave it to you in this one.

    With the most minimal of build, they went out there and beat the ever-loving hell out of each other for little more than bragging rights.

    The shot that broke Thatcher’s ear open, potentially rupturing his eardrum, was wicked and some of the strikes the combatants unloaded on each other were sickening.

    They had a realistic wrestling match that looked like it hurt, made the viewer believe it did and ended with a resourceful former champion seizing an opening for a much-needed win. The nod from Ciampa to Thatcher after the match was a nice show of respect but the reaction of the heel suggests these two are far from finished with each other.

    That is a good thing for fans, but not necessarily the bodies of the performers.

Strap Match: Dexter Lumis vs. Cameron Grimes

4 OF 5

    Credit: WWE.com

    Dexter Lumis spent an entire month haunting, stalking and terrorizing Cameron Grimes. Grimes spent that same time running, cowering and avoiding his foe. He would not have that opportunity in the third match of TakeOver: War Games as he met the stoic Lumis in a Strap Match.

    He got the jump early, attacking Lumis before the bell and beating him around the ringside area. Back inside the ring, though, he fell prey to the overwhelming fury and strength of Lumis. The bell rang and the enigmatic competitor unleashed on Grimes, sending him crashing into the guardrail on multiple occasions. 

    Grimes finally answered, sending Lumis into the same guardrail and dropping him back-first across it. Lumis recovered, only for Grimes to use the strap to flip him over the guardrail and onto the floor.

    Grimes produced a blindfold, not unlike the one he wore in his most recent match with Lumis. It benefited him until Lumis delivered a spinbuster. He tied Grimes up in the steel rigging structure but Grimes again utilized the strap to his advantage, pulling Lumis into it. 

    He blasted Lumis with a steel chair across the back doing more damage to Lumis than we had seen anyone else inflict to this point. 

    Lumis recovered and sent Grimes flying with a fallaway slam, kipped up and fired off a flurry of right hands on Grimes. Again, Grimes used the strap to pull Lumis to the mat. 

    Late in the bout, Grimes countered Silence twice, only to be driven into the steel chair via the strap. Lumis applied Silence and added the strap around the face for the win.

       

    Result

    Lumis defeated Grimes

        

    Grade

    B

        

    Analysis

    There were a lot of questions heading into this match about Lumis ability to perform up to the level of his opposition in NXT. His character work had been great to this point, but he had yet to deliver that one match that left fans convinced that he was at the level of the rest of the roster.

    Grimes is great. He busted his ass in this to help make it more than a tired old gimmick match and it worked. He was fantastic and really deserves a more prominent position on the roster than he currently has. This was all about Lumis, though, who rose to the occasion and delivered his first real above-average match on a night when he absolutely had to. 

    Grimes can easily recover from the loss and become a main event attraction next week if NXT officials want. He’s that good of a performer and an even better character. Lumis needed the performance, can benefit from the win and hopefully, moves onto a new program that allows him to further explore his character.

North American Title Match: Leon Ruff vs. Damian Priest vs. Johnny Gargano

5 OF 5

    Credit: WWE.com

    Unlikely North American Champion Leon Ruff had been at the center of the rivalry between Damian Priest and Johnny Gargano for weeks. It was in that position that he won the title in the first place. Sunday represented his opportunity to prove that he belonged, that he was the rightful champion.

    To do so, he would have to defeat Priest and Gargano in a Triple Threat Match.

    Ruff used his speed and agility advantage early to evade, then fend off Gargano. Priest tossed Ruff aside and pummeled Gargano. The champion answered with a missile dropkick that earned the wrath of Priest. He set up for a chokeslam on Ruff but Gargano broke it up, then joined the champion in ridding the ring of Priest.

    A slingshot spear downed Ruff but the champ kicked out at two. 

    Frustrated by Ruff’s repeated interference in his battle with Johnny Wrestling, The Archer of Infamy delivered a Razor’s Edge that sent the champion crashing through the guardrail. Trainers helped Ruff out of the arena, leaving familiar foes to battle for the gold. 

    Priest and Gargano resumed their rivalry until Ruff emerged from the back and wiped out both men with a top-rope splash. A springboard, twisting cutter to Gargano for two. He accumulated several near-falls before Priest returned and stood between him and Gargano. He flattened the champion with a big boot, then delivered a double flatliner on Gargano and Ruff.

    Gargano recovered and sent Priest into the turnbuckle. With Priest tied in the bottom ropes of one ring, Gargano applied the Garga-No Escape. Priest freed himself, broke up the submission and rocked Gargano. As action broke down, an army of Ghostface-clad attackers jumped Priest. He fought back, wiped out the costumed cowards on both sides of the ring and caught Gargano with a chokeslam on the ring apron.

    Ruff came from out of nowhere with a big splash, but Priest narrowly broke up the pin.

    The Archer of Infamy leveled Gargano but one more Ghostface, this one with a lead pipe, blasted Priest. Ruff tried for a rollup but Gargano rolled through, delivered a superkick and finished Ruff with One Final Beat for the win and title.

    After the match, the lead Ghostface revealed himself to be Austin Theory.

         

    Result

    Gargano defeated Ruff and Priest

         

    Grade

    B+

        

    Analysis

    At least the Ghostfaces made sense within the context of the story and the foundation that had been laid in the weeks prior to the show.

    There will be some who say they were unnecessary and while those people may have a point, what they did was allow Priest to look like an unstoppable badass as he fended them all off, only to fall prey to one last unsuspected assailant. 

    Ruff looked like a star, despite his smaller stature, as he hung in there with both Gargano and Priest en route to a damn fine showing. Gargano winning probably makes the most sense, and his star power can help bring Theory along, but one can only hope Ruff is not out of the picture entirely.

    Furthermore, that Priest does not lose any momentum as his fantastic 2020 comes to an end.

Friday 4 December 2020

WWE SmackDown Full Show Live Streaming 4 December 2020 WWE Smack Downs Highlights 4 December 2020

 

WWE SmackDown Live 12/4/20



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WWE SmackDown Results: Winners, Grades, Highlights and Analysis from December 4

Sana Ejaz Khan

    Credit: WWE.com

    On the march to TLC: Tables, Ladders and Chairs on December 22, Roman Reigns responded to Kevin Owens just one week after The Prizefighter of WWE sent him a message loudly and clearly at the expense of Jey Uso.

    Friday night, Reigns and Uso teamed up to battle Owens and Otis in a blockbuster tag team main event.

    Who emerged victorious, and how did it affect momentum ahead of the final spectacular of 2020?

    Find out with this recap of the December 4 episode. 

Kevin Owens Gets What He Wants

1 OF 6

    Credit: WWE.com

    An emotional tribute to the great Pat Patterson gave way to Roman Reigns, Paul Heyman and Jey Uso kicking off Friday's show.

    Kayla Braxton wasted little time asking The Tribal Chief if he fears Kevin Owens. After seemingly laughing off the question, Reigns watched as KO made his way to the ring.

    The presumptive No. 1 contender, refusing to wait until the night's scheduled main event, pitched a Tables, Ladders and Chairs Match for the December 22 pay-per-view. Uso jumped in and accepted the match, to the dismay of his cousin.

    Reigns refusing to engage his foe with Braxton in the ring opted to walk up the ramp. 

    Owens ended, saying there may be a woman in the ring but Reigns is a bitch.

         

    Grade

    A

        

    Analysis

    Uso's reactionary acceptance, Owens' attempted goading of Reigns into losing his cool and The Head of the Table's continued even-keeled demeanor in the face of confrontation helped make this a strong start to SmackDown.

    Everything Reigns and Uso have touched has been gold for the last three months, while Owens elevates every segment he is part of.

    While it would have been nice to see Reigns and Owens have more time to build a genuine feud, their match at TLC is shaping up to be the showstealer, especially taking into consideration the bar they have set for themselves with their previous encounters.

Natalya vs. Bayley

2 OF 6

    Credit: WWE.com

    A week after Bayley caught a hard right hand from Bianca Belair during The EST’s match with Natalya, The Role Model battled The Queen of Harts while her newfound rival watched from the commentary position.

    Natalya gained early control heading into the break as she sent the longest-reigning SmackDown Women’s Champion ever into the steel steps. Back from the break, Bayley exchanged counters and reversals with her third-generation opponent.

    A late-match distraction by Belair and a Sharpshooter from Natalya proved the one-two punch that ended Bayley’s night on a sour note in what Corey Graves labeled an upset of sorts.

         

    Result

    Natalya defeated Bayley

        

    Grade

    C-

       

    Analysis

    WWE took a page out of AEW’s playbook, for the worse, as the majority of this women’s division match occurred during the commercial break. That is a major disappointment given the talent in the ring and Belair’s opportunity to establish her personality on the mic.

    The lack of actual screen time, not to mention storyline development, hurt this one exponentially.

    The bright spot? Bayley vs. Belair is going to rule.

Six-Man Tag Team Match: Mysterio, Bryan and Big E vs. Zayn, Nakamura and Ziggler

3 OF 6

    Credit: WWE.com

    Another tribute to Patterson, this one to Frank Sinatra’s “My Way,” gave way to a Six-Man Tag Team Match featuring former Intercontinental Champions on both sides. Daniel Bryan, Rey Mysterio and Big E squared off with Dolph Ziggler, Shinsuke Nakamura and current champion Sami Zayn.

    The babyfaces worked over Ziggler early but a distraction by Zayn allowed The Showoff a momentary reprieve. Bryan wiped out Zayn at ringside with a tope but opened himself up to a dropkick from Ziggler that sent him to the floor heading into another commercial break.

    Back from the break, the action broke down as the contestants took turns hitting their signature stuff.

    Late, Zayn made a blind tag to Ziggler. Bryan blasted The Showoff with a running knee and the champ tried for a sneaky rollup. Bryan countered into the YES! Lock, but Zayn barely got to the bottom rope to force the break. 

    A series of pin attempts, culminating in a small package rollup from Bryan, ended the match with a victory for the babyfaces.

    After the match, Ziggler suckered Zayn and Nakamura into charging his opponents, only to find himself at a 3-on-1 disadvantage. He begged off before taking the atomic drop from Bryan, a 619 from Mysterio and a Big Ending from Big E in a sequence Patterson himself would have been proud of.

        

    Result

    Big E, Bryan and Mysterio defeated Ziggler, Nakamura and Zayn

        

    Grade

    A

       

    Analysis

    Graded as a traditional match, this very obviously lacked a heat segment to really tie everything together.

    Limited for time and determined to pay homage to Pat Patterson, his love of a good finish and crowd-pleasing spots, said heat segment was expendable in the name of hitting all of the high notes.

    Ziggler paid tribute to Patterson with his antics after the match, Bryan earned a win over Zayn to reignite their rivalry over the IC title and Big E was allowed to showoff in his renewed singles push.

    Taking the circumstances into consideration it is difficult to argue that this didn’t do exactly what it set out to.

War of the Words

4 OF 6

    Credit: WWE.com

    Michael Cole conducted a split-screen interview with SmackDown Women’s Champion Sasha Banks and Carmella.

    What started as a pedestrian exchange of taunts and smack talk gave way to Carmella accusing Banks of being jealous that The Princess of Staten Island was able to waltz into the WWE Performance Center “on a whim” and become a WWE Superstar, better than Banks, who dreamed of being a champion since childhood.

    The Boss claimed Carmella has never met a “bitch like” her and finished with one last sell for the TLC pay-per-view.

        

    Grade

    B

        

    Analysis

    Don’t look now but Carmella outshined Banks here.

    The former champion nonchalantly admitting that she became a WWE Superstar on a whim and achieving everything she did while Banks had childhood dreams of being the best and had to scratch and claw her way to the top was a great bit of dismissive heel character work. 

    Banks was clearly annoyed/peeved by Carmella speaking so frankly and it added to the overall effect of the segment.

    Who knows what their match on pay-per-view will look like but do not be surprised if Carmella is driven to prove she belongs with Banks, while The Blueprint strives to prove she can steal the show against opponents not named Asuka or Bayley.

Murphy vs. King Corbin

5 OF 6

    Credit: WWE.com

    The budding rivalry between Murphy and King Corbin continued this week as the NXT alumni battled in singles competition. Dominik, Rey and Aliyah Mysterio accompanied the former disciple while Corbin was seconded by two new associates, cloaked in black hoodies.

    A momentary distraction by those mysterious cohorts allowed Corbin to drive Murphy into the ring apron, then throw him over the timekeeper’s position heading into the commercial break.

    Graves revealed it was Steve Cutler and Wesley Blake in the hoodies, recalling their status as part of The Forgotten Sons. The heavies confronted the Mysterios at ringside as Corbin pounded away at this partner, punishing him with hard rights to the head.

    Murphy rocked Corbin with a knee but, before he could build momentum, Cutler and Blake attacked Rey and Dominik. The Aussie attempted to help but ran right into End of Days as Corbin scored the win.

         

    Result

    Corbin defeated Murphy

         

    Grade

    C

        

    Analysis

    Cutler and Blake shaving and moving on from the Forgotten Sons is the very best thing that could happen to their careers. They are talented competitors who got caught up in some controversy and saw their futures called into question. Back now, they have the opportunity to add to Corbin’s act while enhancing an already solid tag team division.

    While Corbin vs. Murphy may not be particularly flashy, it keeps both men busy and the profile of the Mysterio storyline elevates it beyond what it would have been otherwise.

    They have solid enough chemistry and will likely deliver a quality match without a commercial break right in the middle to hurt the flow. A Six-Man Tag Team Match should not be out of the question, either.

Kevin Owens and Otis vs. Roman Reigns and Jey Uso

6 OF 6

    Credit: WWE.com

    Actions have consequences, Roman Reigns warned Jey Uso after the latter’s overzealous acceptance of a match on his cousin’s behalf. Those consequences manifested themselves in the form of a two-on-one handicap match against Otis and Kevin Owens instead of the advertised tag team headliner.

    Otis and Owens teed off on Uso until the heel delivered a well-timed Samoan Drop. Reigns arrived conveniently enough as Uso turned the tide, taking his place on the ring apron.

    Reigns rocked Otis with a Superman Punch, slammed him into the announce table, then into the steel stairs as the Universal Champion unloaded his frustrations on the Blue Collar Brawler. Reigns drove the stairs into Otis and Uso caught Owens heading into the break.

    Reigns rocked Owens with a jumping clothesline and Uso added an uppercut following the commercial timeout. “That’s your problem, Kevin Owens: you talk too damn much!” Uso exclaimed.

    Owens slowed the heels’ momentum, delivering a Samoan Drop to Uso that left Reigns dismayed on the apron. He entered in time to deliver an uppercut into a superkick by Jey. The Tribal Chief ordered Uso to tag out, but Owens caught him with a stunner instead,

    Reigns broke up the pin and applied the guillotine to draw the disqualification. Reigns stared a hole through Uso, who grabbed a pair of chairs from ringside. The heels laid into Owens with a barrage of chair shots and Uso added a top-rope splash as an exclamation point on the assault.

    Reigns beat the unholy hell out of Uso, the “consequences” for his actions earlier.

    “You and your family are going to fear me,” Reigns said before standing tall to close out the show.

        

    Result

    Owens defeated Reigns and Uso via disqualification

         

    Grade

    A

        

    Analysis

    Owens pushed and poked and prodded Reigns until The Tribal Chief responded with a vicious assault, then further took out his frustrations and anger on his own cousin. The not-so-veiled threats he made to Owens’ family were a nice touch, particularly as he took exception to KO trying to pull his family apart.

    Best of all was Reigns, earlier in the night, claiming he wouldn’t take matters into his own hands because a lady was present, then proceeding to beat the hell out of everyone while female fans watched. It was yet another example of Reigns speaking out of both sides of his mouth, something all great heels do to varying degrees of success.

    Right now, he is completely owning this character to tremendous effect

Wednesday 2 December 2020

WWE NXT Full Show Live Streaming 2 December 2020 WWE NXT Highlights 2 December 2020 HD

 


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WWE NXT Results: Winners, Grades, Reaction and Highlights from December 2

Sana Ejaz Khan

    Credit: WWE.com

    This week's episode was the final show before Sunday's TakeOver: WarGames event, so it was all hands on deck to prepare for the pay-per-view.

    Ahead of their teams doing battle inside the WarGames cage, Shotzi Blackheart and Raquel Gonzalez competed in a ladder match to determine which team would have the advantage heading into Sunday.

    Prior to Wednesday's show, Legado del Fantasma attacked Curt Stallion ahead of his NXT debut in addition to having some unkind words about Leon Ruff.

    Let's take a look at everything that happened on the pre-TakeOver episode of NXT.

Damian Priest and Leon Ruff vs. Raul Mendoza and Santos Escobar

1 OF 5

    NXT opened with Triple H, Shawn Michaels, William Regal and the entire roster on the stage observing a moment of silence for the late Pat Patterson before a tribute video played.

    When we returned after the usual intro song, Damian Priest was in the ring waiting on Leon Ruff and Legado del Fantasma to arrive. Ruff convinced Priest to let him start for their team.

    Santos Escobar grounded Ruff and then stood up and allowed him to stand up so he could show how much better he was than his opponent. Raul Mendoza tagged in, and Ruff took him down with a dropkick for two.

    After Ruff took a brutal knee to the face, Priest tagged himself in. Escobar immediately tagged out so Mendoza had to lock up with him. Legado del Fantasma gained control during the commercial break when Priest was distracted by someone in a Ghostface costume in the crowd.

    Ruff finally tagged back in and took it to Mendoza and Escobar with a flurry of quick maneuvers. Priest tagged back in to clean house a few moments later. Ruff tagged himself in and hit a big splash for the pin.

                           

    Grade: B

                          

    Analysis

    The pre-show attack to set this up robbed Stallion of his debut, but Ruff and Priest made for an interesting one-time combination.

    Johnny Gargano was great on commentary as the antagonist who is still bitter about losing his North American Championship. He knows his character and plays it perfectly.

    Legado del Fantasma looked like the more cohesive unit, but that is to be expected from a group with a lot more experience working together. This bout could have been better, but it was good enough to keep the viewer's interest.

August Grey vs. Cameron Grimes

2 OF 5

    August Grey took on Cameron Grimes in the second match of the night. The Red Dead NPC brought a strap with him to intimidate his opponent ahead of his strap match Sunday.

    Grimes took control right away and taunted Grey as he tried to inflict as much pain as possible. Grey began to make a comeback and hit a big crossbody from the top rope for a two-count.

    About 20 seconds later, Grimes hit the Cave-In for the pin and the win. As he continued to attack Grey, Dexter Lumis arrived and took him down with his own strap.

                                

    Grade: C

                                 

    Analysis

    This was a short match designed to give Grimes some momentum before his match at WarGames. It accomplished its goal but was still too quick to be memorable.

    The post-match attack on Grey as Grimes spoke to Lumis was entertaining and made him look a little more dangerous than usual, at least until Lumis showed up.

Jake Atlas vs. Tony Nese

3 OF 5

    The announcers said Jake Atlas was dedicating this match in Patterson's honor. He locked up, and Tony Nese took control early using his strength advantage.

    Atlas turned things around and hit a suicide dive. He tried to climb to the top rope, but The Premier Athlete knocked him down with one big jumping strike.

    Nese lifted him up for a torture rack, but Atlas broke free and started to fight back. He hit a release German suplex and a spinning forearm for a near-fall.

    After a few acrobatics, Nese hit a huge kick to the face for a close two-count. Atlas recovered and hit the cartwheel DDT for the win.

                               

    Grade: B+

                              

    Analysis

    This was a fun match between two of the most versatile performers on the NXT roster. It had high-flying spots, a little technical wrestling and plenty of striking.

    Nese is an underrated performer who can make anyone look good, but Atlas hardly needs help. He has been impressive since his debut, and his more aggressive attitude has helped him in a lot of ways.

    After the match, Atlas gave an interview and promised that this win was just the beginning. It was short but effective.

The Grizzled Young Veterans vs. Imperium

4 OF 5

    Pat McAfee and his trio of friends came out to deliver a promo directed at The Undisputed Era. McAfee did a good job being a heel you want to see get punched in the face.

    The next segment saw Ever-Rise prepare to battle The Grizzled Young Veterans, but Imperium came out and attacked Ever-Rise first. This led to a new match between the two former NXT UK teams.

    Fabian Aichner started off with Zack Gibson. Imperium got the upper hand right away and employed some double-team tactics before James Drake helped turn the tables.

    The two teams continued to trade control back and forth for quite some time. Nobody had an advantage for more than a minute. After the break, Gibson and Drake were dominating the match.

    Marcel Barthel planted Gibson with a rough side slam for a two-count. They both tagged in their partners after a bit, and Drake had the advantage until Barthel helped his partner hit an impressive suplex for a near-fall.

    Aichner took out both opponents and his partner with a huge dive from the top rope to the floor before Ever-Rise returned to attack both teams and cause a disqualification.

                                 

    Grade: B

                                

    Analysis

    There were a couple of sloppy spots because they were trying to work a quick pace, but it didn't do anything to make this bout any less enjoyable. Missing a suplex counter isn't a huge deal.

    These are two teams who have worked together before and put their chemistry on full display. Imperium had the technical game down, while GYV brought the brawling.

    Ever-Rise was an unfortunate casualty, but seeing as the team is still new, it didn't have any momentum to stall so it can recover quickly. The post-match attack certainly helped. If this is a future NXT tag title feud, it will, hopefully, give us more fights like this one.

Shotzi Blackheart vs. Raquel Gonzalez

5 OF 5

    Gonzalez took control almost immediately by employing her significant size advantage. Blackheart kept herself in the fight, but it took help from a ladder to get in any real offense.

    The green-haired grappler kicked the ladder into her face at ringside before trying to bring it into the ring. Gonzalez picked her up and dropped her hard, but Blackheart was right back on her a moment later.

    Blackheart climbed onto the divider on the barricade and hit a coffin drop on the floor. We returned from a break to see Blackheart and Gonzalez almost botch a DDT on the apron. Gonzalez slammed her onto the apron to give herself some time to recover.

    Blackheart pushed over the ladder to prevent her opponent from reaching the top. She sent Gonzalez's face into the ladder in the corner by using her whole body as a weapon. She hit a nasty looking senton on the floor, and both women went down hard.

    The other women from the WarGames match came down and started a huge brawl. Io Shirai came out of nowhere to prevent Gonzalez from winning. She took out everyone at ringside with a moonsault. This left Blackheart alone to climb the ladder and retrieve the briefcase with the golden ticket.

                            

    Grade: B+

                             

    Analysis

    Blackheart's style involves taking a lot of risks, so you have to account for the occasional botch, especially in a match like this. That said, there was only one or two clear mistakes. Everything else looked good.

    Io Shirai seemed like an obvious choice to join Team Blackheart, but it's hard to think of a better pick right now. She isn't defending the title Sunday, so putting her in WarGames was a smart call.

    This was a good way to close the show and send us into this weekend's event. TakeOver always has the potential to be an awesome show, and the lineup for Sunday is no exception

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