NXT TakeOver: WarGames (2020)

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NXT TakeOver: WarGames
Promotion
WWE
BrandNXT
DateDecember 6, 2020
CityOrlando, Florida
VenueCapitol Wrestling Center
Attendance0 (behind closed doors)[a]
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NXT TakeOver: WarGames
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The 2020 NXT TakeOver: WarGames was the 32nd

Capitol Wrestling Center, hosted at the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Florida. It was the first WarGames event to air on traditional PPV in addition to the WWE Network. The 2020 event ended the show's tradition of being held as part of Survivor Series weekend. It was also the final WarGames held under the TakeOver series, which was discontinued in late 2021 with WarGames
held as its own event that year.

Five matches were contested at the event. In the main event,

Io Shirai
) in the women's WarGames match.

Production

.

Background

TakeOver was a series of professional wrestling events that began in May 2014, as WWE's NXT brand held its second WWE Network-exclusive event, billed as TakeOver.[1] In subsequent months, the "TakeOver" moniker became the brand used by WWE for all of its major NXT events. While originally exclusive to the WWE Network, NXT TakeOver events also became available on traditional pay-per-view beginning with TakeOver 31 in October 2020.[2] Announced on September 3, 2020, the 32nd NXT TakeOver was held on December 6, 2020.[3] During the November 18 episode of NXT, it was promoted under the name "TakeOver: WarGames", marking the fourth in the WarGames chronology, a subseries of TakeOvers that feature the WarGames match and were originally held as a support show for WWE's annual Survivor Series pay-per-view. Unlike previous years, however, the 2020 WarGames was not held as a support show for that year's Survivor Series; it was instead held two weeks after Survivor Series.[4] It was available for purchase on In Demand.[5]

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic

As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic that began affecting the industry in mid-March, WWE had to present the majority of its programming from a behind closed doors set. NXT's programming was initially held at NXT's home base of Full Sail University in Winter Park, Florida. In October 2020, NXT's events were moved to the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Florida, featuring the "Capitol Wrestling Center" setup, an homage to the Capitol Wrestling Corporation, the predecessor to WWE. Like the WWE ThunderDome utilized for Raw and SmackDown's programming, LED boards were placed around the Performance Center so that fans could attend virtually, while additionally, friends and family members of the wrestlers were in attendance, along with a limited number of actual live fans, divided from each other by plexiglass walls.[6][7]

Storylines

The card included matches that resulted from scripted storylines. Results were predetermined by WWE's writers on the NXT brand, while storylines were produced on WWE's weekly television program, NXT.[8][9]

At

triple threat match at TakeOver: WarGames.[13]

On the October 7 episode of NXT,

strap match between him and Lumis at TakeOver: WarGames.[13]

On the November 18 episode of NXT, Timothy Thatcher defeated August Grey in a match but was soon confronted by Tommaso Ciampa, and Thatcher backed away from him saying "I have no problem with you".[12] On the December 2 episode of NXT, Thatcher was in the ring teaching a "Thatch as Thatch Can" lesson on "Distractions", when Ciampa appeared and was told by Thatcher that he didn't want any trouble with him. After throwing him to the mat following an attempted attack, Ciampa was blindsided by Thatcher's student and thrown into the plexiglass by Thatcher himself, who then applied a guillotine choke to make him pass out. Thatcher later said he would meet Ciampa for a "lesson" at TakeOver: WarGames.[15]

Event

Other on-screen personnel
Role: Name:
Commentators Vic Joseph
Wade Barrett
Beth Phoenix
Spanish commentators Carlos Cabrera
Marcelo Rodríguez
Ring announcer
Alicia Taylor
Referees
Drake Wuertz
Darryl Sharma
D.A. Brewer
Tom Castor
Stephon Smith
Aja Smith
Jake Clemons
Interviewer McKenzie Mitchell
Pre-show panel Sam Roberts
Wade Barrett

Preliminary matches

Before the event went live on pay-per-view, a six-man tag team match occurred between the team of Curt Stallion, Ashante "Thee" Adonis, and August Grey, against the team of

Legado del Fantasma. This match was uploaded to WWE's YouTube and Facebook
accounts the day of the event. After an opening sequence where each man tagged in once, Legado del Fantasma isolated Adonis with repeated tags and tandem offence. He eventually made the "hot tag" to Stallion, who for several moments was dominant in the match, easily dispatching with all three members of the opposing team. The finish came when Grey and Mendoza were legal, and Grey Irish whipped Mendoza into his corner. Escobar blind tagged himself into the match, and entered the ring while Grey executed a hip toss on Mendoza. As Grey turned around, Escobar executed a leg lariat and "Legado" to win the match.

The pay-per-view began with the women's

NXT Women's Champion from entering. Shirai eventually entered the match by diving off the top of the cage structure and into the ring, while inhabiting a trash can. Other noteworthy spots included Moon performing "The Eclipse" onto Kai while Kai stood stunned over two steel chairs, Blackheart performing her signature finishing senton splash off a ladder onto LeRae while LeRae had a chair draped over her (reportedly causing LeRae to sustain a broken arm[16]), Kai performing a diving double stomp onto Shirai while Shirai was again inhabiting a trash can, and González performing a Chingona Bomb onto Shirai through a ladder bridge set up between the two rings. This last spot was the match's conclusion, with González pinning Shirai to secure victory for Team LeRae.[17]

Tommaso Ciampa then faced Timothy Thatcher in the only standard singles match featured on the show. The match featured lengthy sequences of grueling mat wrestling, with each man targeting body parts where the other was known to have history of injury - Thatcher focused much of his offence on Ciampa's neck and knees and Ciampa on Thatcher's left leg. Thatcher also sustained a bloody contusion to his left ear during the match, following a Ciampa running knee lift. The finish came when Ciampa locked in a guillotine choke on Thatcher through the ropes, which is an illegal hold. With the referee administering the five-count for Ciampa to break it or be disqualified, at the count of four he transitioned into the "Willow's Bell" DDT and earned the pinfall. After the match, as the two men slowly came to, they stared directly at each other for several minutes, even as Thatcher retreated up the entrance ramp and the show cut away to a video package introducing the next match.[17]

Next was the

strap match between Cameron Grimes and Dexter Lumis. Grimes arrived to the ring with a leather strap already on his hand. The referee tried to force him to use the strap that had been officially designated for use in the match, but Grimes refused to take his off. The referee asked Lumis if he would agree to using Grimes' strap; consistent with his character, Lumis said nothing. Grimes held the offensive advantage for much of the match, using both his strap and the official strap to attack Lumis' eyes, which had been a focus of their feud up to this point. Lumis eventually gained the advantage by repeatedly whipping Grimes with the strap, as Grimes lay prone on the mat. The finish came when he trapped Grimes in "The Silencer", and Grimes quickly submitted.[17]

In the only championship match of the night, Leon Ruff then defended his NXT North American Championship against two former champions, Damian Priest and Johnny Gargano, the latter the only man to have held the championship more than once as well as being the man Ruff defeated to win it. In the early going, Priest repeatedly tried to dismiss Ruff as a factor in the match, being nearly a foot taller and a hundred pounds heavier than the champion. He tried to focus all of his attacks on Gargano, while warning Ruff to stay out of his way. Gargano, for his part, pretended to team up with Ruff (particularly as Priest also enjoys a noticeable size advantage over Gargano) only to use the seeming teamwork for opportunities to take "cheap shots" at Ruff. Eventually, Priest became angry at Ruff's repeated attempts to physically become part of the match and hit him with one of his signature maneuvers, "The Razor's Edge" (in honour of

Ghostface masks appeared at ringside trying to attack Priest. Priest used his high flying abilities to fend off many of them, and appeared poised to hit "The Reckoning" on Gargano to all but certainly win the match and regain the championship. At this point, one final Ghostface appeared and struck Priest with a pipe, removing him from the match. Gargano capitalized and hit Ruff "One Final Beat" DDT to earn the pinfall and win the championship for a record third time. As Gargano and the final Ghostface departed up the entrance ramp, the latter unmasked himself as Austin Theory.[17]

Two vignettes aired after the match, showing the returns of both Finn Bálor and Karrion Kross.[17]

Main event

The men's WarGames match between The Undisputed Era and the team led by Pat McAfee was the main event. Kyle O'Reilly and Pete Dunne, who had fought in the ladder match to determine the advantage for this match, started off. As McAfee's team held said advantage, the first subsequent man to enter the WarGames structure was Oney Lorcan. After three minutes, O'Reilly's regular tag team partner Bobby Fish joined the fray for team Undisputed Era. The entrance order from that point on was Danny Burch, then Roderick Strong, then McAfee, then Adam Cole. When he entered, McAfee introduced four tables into the WarGames structure, each emblazoned with the Undisputed Era's logo and one of the four team members' names. He performed a moonsault onto Strong to send Strong through the table with his name on it. When Cole came out, he sprayed Team McAfee with a fire extinguisher and went to work on them. Other noteworthy spots included Strong splashing Dunne through one of the tables, McAfee (a former National Football League player competing in just his second professional wrestling match) performing a "Swanton Bomb" from the top of the structure onto all seven other men, McAfee locking in a Figure Four leglock on Cole, Burch and Dunne making repeated use of cricket bats Burch introduced to the structure, Fish sending Burch through one of the other tables, Dunne hitting O'Reilly with "The Bitter End" for a two-count and a sequence of finishing maneuvers. This sequence started with Cole hitting his "Panama City Sunrise" on McAfee for only a nearfall, resulting in Cole's signature WarGames shocked face. Cole then poised to hit McAfee with a "The Last Shot" with an exposed knee, but at the last moment Lorcan, from outta nowhere, pushed McAfee out of the way and ate the move instead. Dunne then hit Cole with "The Bitter End", with Strong breaking up the pinfall. With everyone else out of the picture, O'Reilly and Fish hit Lorcan with a couple of stiff kicks, and O'Reilly followed with a diving knee drop onto a chair placed over Lorcan's face, with this sequence earning the pinfall and victory for team Undisputed Era.[17]

Reception

Wrestling journalist Dave Meltzer's star ratings for each match ranged from generally positive to glowing, as he gave 3.25 stars each to the strap match and the NXT North American Championship triple threat, 3.5 stars to the women's WarGames match, 3.75 stars to the singles match between Tommaso Ciampa and Timothy Thatcher, and 4.75 stars to the men's WarGames match.[18]

The event itself would later become 2020's Event of the Year by NXT.

Aftermath

Along with Candice LeRae's arm injury, Bobby Fish and Oney Lorcan from the men's WarGames match were noted to have suffered serious lacerations, with Lorcan needing assistance to return to the locker room area after the show went off the air. Numerous other wrestlers also reported minor injuries, not expected to cause them to miss time, on their social media profiles after the show.[19] Fish's injury required minor surgery and eight weeks of recovery time to fix; a piece of the cage pierced his elbow and severed his triceps.[20]

A special episode of NXT called New Year's Evil was announced during TakeOver, to air January 6, 2021, the first Wednesday (NXT's typical airdate) of the new year.[17][21] Finn Bálor opened the December 9 episode of the program, announcing that he would defend the NXT Championship at New Year's Evil but did not especially care who his challenger was, referring to the matter as "Regal's problem." Pete Dunne, Kyle O'Reilly, Damian Priest, and Karrion Kross' valet Scarlett each staked a claim to the title shot. Bálor dismissed Dunne, O'Reilly, and Priest, but seemed prepared to accept Kross' challenge. Kross himself physically returned later in the show, attacking Priest, setting up a match between the two of them at New Year's Evil.[22] On December 16, that left Dunne and O'Reilly to compete in a number one contender's match, won by O'Reilly to set up an NXT TakeOver 31 rematch between himself and Bálor for the championship at New Year's Evil.[23]

Also on December 9, Johnny Gargano, Candice LeRae, Indi Hartwell, and Austin Theory appeared together in the ring, celebrating their successes at WarGames and giving their faction a name, "The Way."[22] On December 30, Gargano defeated Leon Ruff in an NXT North American Championship match to end their feud and mark the first time in three reigns as North American Champion and one as NXT Champion that Gargano had ever successfully defended a singles championship.[24] Off-camera, LeRae's injury was eventually determined not to be a broken arm, but a less serious injury to her abdominal cartilage which would not cause her to miss substantial time.[25]

The feuds between Tommaso Ciampa and Timothy Thatcher on the men's side and Raquel González and Rhea Ripley on the women's side continued after WarGames and into New Year's Evil. On the December 23 episode of NXT, Ciampa and Thatcher were announced for the second-ever

Last Woman Standing match.[27]

The 2020 TakeOver: WarGames would be the final WarGames held under the TakeOver series, as in late 2021, the TakeOver series was discontinued, with the 2021 WarGames event simply promoted as "NXT WarGames".[28]

Results

No.ResultsStipulationsTimes
dark match

Notes

  1. Capitol Wrestling Center
    viewing experience.
  2. ^ The match aired on WWE's Facebook page after the event had concluded airing on the WWE Network.

References

  1. canoe.ca. Archived
    from the original on July 4, 2015. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
  2. ^ Defelice, Robert (October 3, 2020). "NXT TakeOver 31 To Be Available On Traditional Pay-Per-View". Fightful. Archived from the original on October 8, 2020. Retrieved October 4, 2020.
  3. ^ Johnson, Mike (September 3, 2020). "WWE NXT TakeOver updates". PWInsider. Archived from the original on September 6, 2020. Retrieved March 20, 2025.
  4. ^ Toro, Carlos (November 18, 2020). "NXT TakeOver: WarGames Announced, Shotzi Blackheart Tells Candice LeRae To Prepare For War". Fightful. Archived from the original on November 19, 2020. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  5. ^ "WWE: NXT TakeOver WarGames". iN DEMAND Pay-Per-View.
  6. ^ WWE.com Staff (October 4, 2020). "Capitol Wrestling Center to be unveiled tonight at NXT TakeOver 31". WWE. Archived from the original on October 4, 2020. Retrieved October 4, 2020.
  7. ^ Defelice, Robert (October 4, 2020). "NXT TakeOver 31 To Feature The Debut Of The Capitol Wrestling Center". Fightful. Archived from the original on October 26, 2020. Retrieved October 4, 2020.
  8. Discovery Communications. Archived
    from the original on November 29, 2013. Retrieved March 5, 2012.
  9. ^ "Live & Televised Entertainment". WWE. Archived from the original on February 18, 2009. Retrieved March 21, 2012.
  10. ^ a b Moore, John (October 28, 2020). "10/28 NXT TV results: Moore's review of the Halloween Havoc edition featuring Damian Priest vs. Johnny Gargano for the NXT North American Title and Io Shirai vs. Candice LeRae for the NXT Women's Title in Spin The Wheel, Make The Deal matches, Rhea Ripley vs. Raquel Gonzalez, Cameron Grimes vs. Dexter Lumis in a Haunted House of Terror match". Pro Wrestling Dot Net. Retrieved October 29, 2020.
  11. ^ Moore, John (November 11, 2020). "11/11 NXT TV results: Moore's review of Championship Wednesday with Johnny Gargano defending the NXT North American Title, Santos Escobar vs. Jake Atlas for the NXT Cruiserweight Title, Danny Burch and Oney Lorcan vs. Tyler Breeze and Fandango for the NXT Tag Titles". Pro Wrestling Dot Net. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  12. ^ a b c Moore, John (November 18, 2020). "11/18 NXT TV results: Moore's review of Io Shirai vs. Rhea Ripley for the NXT Women's Title, Leon Ruff vs. Johnny Gargano for the NXT North American Title, Dexter Lumis vs. Cameron Grimes in a Blindfold match, NXT Champion Finn Balor returns". Pro Wrestling Dot Net. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  13. ^ a b Moore, John (November 25, 2020). "11/25 NXT TV results: Moore's review of the ladder match to determine the WarGames match advantage, Ember Moon vs. Candice LeRae, Kushida vs. Timothy Thatcher, KO Show with Leon Ruff, Rhea Ripley promo". Pro Wrestling Dot Net. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
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  15. ^ Moore, John (December 2, 2020). "12/2 NXT TV results: Moore's review of Shotzi Blackheart vs. Raquel Gonzalez in a ladder match to determine the WarGames match advantage, the final push for Sunday's NXT Takeover WarGames event". Pro Wrestling Dot Net. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  16. ^ Ounpraseuth, Jason (December 7, 2020). "Candice LeRae Injury Update Following "WWE NXT: WarGames"". Wrestling Inc. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h Moore, John (December 6, 2020). "NXT Takeover WarGames results: Moore's live review of Undisputed Era vs. Pat McAfee, Pete Dunne, Oney Lorcan, and Danny Burch, and Shotzi Blackheart, Ember Moon, Rhea Ripley, and Io Shirai vs. Candice LeRae, Toni Storm, Dakota Kai, and Raquel Gonzalez in WarGames matches". Pro Wrestling Dot Net. Archived from the original on December 10, 2020. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  18. ^ Dangoor, Louis (December 11, 2020). "WWE NXT TakeOver WarGames Star Ratings Revealed". Wrestletalk. Retrieved December 18, 2020.
  19. ^ Casey, Connor (December 7, 2020). "NXT Injury Updates Following NXT TakeOver: WarGames 2020". Comicbook.com. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
  20. Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online
    . Retrieved December 13, 2020.
  21. ^ Middleton, Marc (December 6, 2020). "New Year's Evil Special Edition of WWE NXT Announced". Wrestling Inc. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
  22. ^ a b Lindberg, Nate (December 9, 2020). "12/9 NXT ON USA REPORT: Lindberg's Live Results for Ciampa vs. Grimes, Ember Moon vs. Raquel Gonzales, Finn Balor's appearance and the fallout from War Games". Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
  23. ^ Wells, Kelly (December 16, 2020). "12/16 NXT ON USA REPORT: Wells's report on Kyle O'Reilly vs. Pete Dunne in a #1 Contender's match, Rhea Ripley vs. Toni Storm, Ruff & Kushida vs. Gargano & Theory, more". Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
  24. ^ Wells, Kelly (January 4, 2021). "12/30 NXT ON USA REPORT: Wells's report on Johnny Gargano vs. Leon Ruff, Bronson Reed vs. Isaiah Scott, Mercedes Martinez returns, more". Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
  25. ^ "Candice LeRae Provides Update Following WarGames Injury •".
  26. ^ Wells, Kelly (May 27, 2020). "5/27 NXT ON USA REPORT: Wells's report on Riddle vs. Thatcher cage match, Ripley & Shirai vs. Charlotte & mystery partner, Kushida vs. Atlas vs. Maverick". Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
  27. ^ Wells, Kelly (December 23, 2020). "12/23 NXT ON USA REPORT: Wells's report on Burch & Lorcan vs. Drake & Dain in a Street Fight, Rhea Ripley vs. Dakota Kai, A Very Gargano Christmas, more". Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
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  33. ^ Burdick, Michael (December 6, 2020). "Johnny Gargano def. Leon Ruff and Damian Priest to become the new NXT North American Champion". WWE. Retrieved December 7, 2020.
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