Unfortunately it was only good.
Usually a wrestling company should be happy if they put
on a card that can be described as good. Not so here. With Elimination Chamber
WWE were coming off a very strong Royal Rumble pay-per-view and building
towards their biggest card of the year. It was a middleman show but that wasn’t
to stop it being entertaining in its own right. I’ll discuss this further
below.
Things kicked off with a World Heavyweight championship
match between Alberto Del Rio and Big Show. It wasn’t bad but it wasn’t as
thrilling as their last man standing outing at the Rumble. Fought under
standard rules it was never going to be.
The two could have been given a little leeway, especially
as the only other gimmick match on the card was the cage battle. As it was the
final entry into their feud they deserved the chance to go out with a bang. A
falls count anywhere battle would have worked fine.
Del Rio won via tap out with his cross armbreaker
submission. Thankfully he’ll be leaving Big Show behind. Presumably ‘The Giant’
will be paired up with Ryback for WrestleMania. As I’ve written before a Shell
Shock on Show seems like a WrestleMania Moment™ waiting to happen.
Those red trunks must be lucky
Match two was the United States title match between
Antonio Cesaro and The Miz. It was an average match that seemed worse than it
was thanks to an uninterested crowd. ‘The Awesome One’ got DQed after Cesaro
deliberately got himself low blowed. This was probably done to set up another
outing between the two either for WrestleMania or a TV show in the next six
weeks. Either way I’m not looking forward to it.
Up next, surprisingly early in the running order, was the
Elimination Chamber. Zeb Colter cut a promo beforehand. It was similar to the
one he gave us on RAW. American has failed itself and he and Jack Swagger are
going to clean it up. He uttered his “We the people!” phrase too. Taken on its
own it doesn’t really mean anything.
WWE made the smart decision of having Chris Jericho and
Daniel Bryan start things off. Well, it would have been a smart decision had
‘Y2J’ not been having one of his off nights. He didn’t make any major fumbles,
he just seemed generally sloppy, rushing through what should have been standard
exchanges and seeming overly keen to show how good he and Bryan are against one
another.
‘The All American American’ was the first man unleashed
from his cell, followed by Kane. Bryan and ‘The Big Red Machine’, who were (and
are) still the tag team champions despite not having taken their belts to the
ring for this match, turned on one another moments after they’d performed some
generic double team moves. Although he’d told Kane he’d watch his back
throughout the match Bryan tried rolling Kane up for a schoolboy.
Kane kicked out of that at one.
The two battled for a moment or so before Swagger and
Jericho rejoined them to establish that it was now every man for himself. Team
Hell No were not helping one another.
Orton entered the ring and didn’t really do anything of
interest. Finally Mark Henry lumbered in as everybody was down. He quickly
eliminated ‘The World’s Toughest Vegan’ with a World’s Strongest Slam, then did
the same to Kane soon after. In a spot destined to make it onto future Chamber
hype videos ‘The World’s Strongest Man’ blasted Orton through the Perspex of
one of the cells. That wrote ‘The Viper’ out of proceedings for a bit to allow
him a heroic comeback spot later.
Henry, Swagger and Jericho tussled for a while. It was a lengthy
sequence that did what it was supposed to, namely keep the crowd entertained
and guessing as to who’d be the next out. Eventually Henry went for a splash
from the second rope on both Swagger and Jericho only to miss. The Swagmeister
than gave him a big boot which ‘The Highlight of the Night’ followed with a
Codebreaker. ‘The Viper’ then returned to nail an elimination-gaining RKO to a
thunderous pop.
The match chugged towards its inevitable conclusion with
some slick exchanges between the remaining three men. Jericho eventually fell
to an RKO after a nice series of finisher attempts and counters, with Swagger
running in to surprise ‘The Apex Predator’ with a rollup immediately
afterwards.
‘The Real American’ celebrated his victory by bellowing
animalistically in the aisle. Orton stood in the ring looking shocked and
disappointed. I hope WWE are going somewhere with this story. Orton pulled the
same face at the Rumble. It doesn’t matter if it’s the predictable “I’ve lost
my focus” routine, it just needs to go somewhere.
Swagger winning sets him up as the challenger to Alberto
Del Rio’s World Heavyweight championship. We haven’t seen what WWE are doing
with this feud yet but the dynamic seems promising. Swagger is the bigoted
American who wants to “save” the country while ADR is the foreign hero who
embodies the true principles of the USA. I hope WWE don’t mess it up, it could
be great.
WWE deserves credit for the booking of the Chamber match.
There were three credible choices for winner and it wasn’t at all clear who’d
be leaving as the number one contender. Mark Henry seemed like a possibility
for much of the match, and having Orton go down to a smashed door spot,
immediately setting up a valiant comeback, made him look likely too. Swagger
stealing the win in the way he did was also intelligent: he couldn’t have
credibly lasted against or beaten Orton.
The show’s fourth match saw the babyface club of Sheamus,
John Cena and Rybac tangle with The Shield. The match was about as good as I’d
expected. It didn’t reach the heights of The Shield’s tables, ladders and
chairs match last December but how could it have done? This bout was as good as
it was going to be considering the lack of gimmicks and who was involved.
I’d predicted a victory for Rollins, Ambrose and Reigns
but the finish of the match still surprised me: Ryback was going for the Muscle
Buster on Rollins but got speared by Reigns, allowing Rollins to get the
pinfall. I’d expected ‘The Celtic Warrior’ to take the loss for his team,
keeping Cena strong for his ‘Mania collision and protecting Ryback’s dubious
streak. If ‘The Human Wrecking Ball’ is going to face Big Show at WrestleMania
he’s going to need some rehabilitation after this loss.
Who can stop this guy?! Erm... Seth Rollins...
Dolph Ziggler strutted out to remind us of his existence only
to get booked in a bonus match by Booker T. His opponent was Kofi Kingston.
This was a good match and all (because Kingston v Ziggler is never anything less)
but it seemed a little pointless. Nobody seriously thought ‘The Wildcat’ was
going to beat the company’s top rising star and the post-match beating Big E Langston
administered was just burial for the sake of burial. Kofi could mean something
if WWE worked out how to present him correctly.
Perhaps the most notable thing about the segment was Big E's new ring gear. A back view teased us with a wafer thin slice of buttock protruding from beneath the singlet. The front view appeared to be an explanation of the NXT champ's ring name.
Perhaps the most notable thing about the segment was Big E's new ring gear. A back view teased us with a wafer thin slice of buttock protruding from beneath the singlet. The front view appeared to be an explanation of the NXT champ's ring name.
A better use of this slot would have been to further the
rivalry between Bo Dallas and Wade Barrett. They could have had a singles match
that had a DQ or cheated finish to set up a rematch or Dallas could have been
booked in a singles bout with ‘The Show Off’ and been cost a victory by
Barrett. That would at least have accomplished something.
Kaitlyn successfully defended her Divas championship
against Tamina Snuka in the evening’s penultimate match. It was the worst thing
on the show, designed to calm the crowd back down before the main event hit.
The women deserve better but they’re not going to get it until the division
receives a restock.
The evening ended with the rematch between WWE champion The Rock and CM Punk. Punk entered with the title and had Justin Roberts announce him as ‘The People’s Champion’. Even that couldn’t persuade some members of the audience to boo him. That’s what WWE gets for putting a reliable worker into a main event scene that’s been dominated for so long by John Cena.
The main event was not good. Deprived of the shortcuts
they’d used at last month’s Royal Rumble and lumbered with ‘The Great One’s’
diminished conditioning the two men set a sluggish pace featuring an
overabundance of rest holds and stalling. Punk was on offence for the majority
of the first three quarters, a good call considering his status as the more
active of the pair.
Even Punk spitting in The Rock’s face couldn’t tip this
match over the edge. The crowd reacted to it the right way, but within minutes
the two wrestlers were back to stalling.
Rock closes his eyes and awaits a kiss
Things came alive in the final portion of the bout. Punk
kicked out of a Rock Bottom. Chioda took a bump and Punk connected with a GTS
on the champ to have the match won. Only there was no ref. This should satisfy
any Punk fans that he can still claim a rematch in the future because he had
the match won. Rock hit a spinebuster and a People’s Elbow, eventually getting
a second ref to count the fall.
Punk kicked out at two. ‘The Second City Saint’ blasted
Rock with a kick to the head and signalled for Heyman to get the title belt. Heyman
slid that in and then grabbed Rock, holding him for a belt shot from Punk. The
champ dodged (which was completely predictable) and then hit Punk with the
match winning Rock Bottom.
Elimination Chamber was a show about lining things up for
WrestleMania XXIX. That was fine, it’s something that needs to be done at some
point and a pay-per-view is the logical place. But that doesn’t excuse the
perfunctory feel EC 2013 had. Swagger’s win aside there was nothing surprising
on the show. Could Triple H not have appeared to challenge Lesnar to a match?
Could the Undertaker not have returned after the WWE title bout for a staredown
with Punk? I’d even have accepted Cena’s music hitting after ‘The Brahma Bull’
had retained. The show going off the air with Rock and Cena shaking hands or
pointing at a sign would have been more interesting that Rock’s solo posing.
The final match was the biggest disappointment. Rock and
Punk didn’t match the pace they set last month. Which concerns me for
WrestleMania XXIX. Rock and Cena had a lethargic battle at last year’s show. If
they’re having a rematch this year (which, obviously, they are) they need to go
hell for leather and make it a fast and physical battle. Based on Elimination
Chamber The Rock’s not up to it. Which will mean a poor ‘Mania main event for
the second year in a row.
No comments:
Post a Comment