This year was no different. A man neither the live crowd
nor the home audience really wanted to see win was the man that won. Not only
that but he did so in the most underwhelming, clichéd manner possible. It was a
poor end to a poor pay-per-view.
This was not helped by a generic undercard. The show
kicked off with The Ascension versus the New Age Outlaws. It wasn’t a bad
match, but that in itself made it a slight disappointment. The Outlaws should
have been very quickly squashed by Konor and Viktor in an attempt to erase the
memory of the Kliq and the APA, all of whom are well into their forties, easily
dispatching The Ascension on RAW. Because it’s The Ascension who are going to
be of more benefit to WWE in the future, not the stars form the 90s.
Facepaint. |
But we didn’t get that. Instead we got a competent match
that ended with Billy Gunn tagging in to take Total Elimina- sorry, I mean The
Fall of Man. It was the right result but the wrong route was taken to get to
it.
Because the card only had five matches it was heavily
padded. The first instance of this was the deluge of ads that followed The
Ascension’s victory. Mixed in with that was news that Vince McMahon had tweeted
about Rock being in Philadelphia, the city hosting the Rumble. We were also
treated to Triple H and Stephanie McMahon discussing Sting. They were concerned
he’d get into the building again. Then Paul Heyman rocked up and told them that
the solution to their Sting problem was Brock Lesnar. Nothing came of this on
the rest of the show so presumably it was setting something up for the future.
The tag team title match went on second. The Miz’s music
got a raucous cheer from the crowd. Miz himself was booed while Damien Mizdow, his
bearded, super-over stunt double, got a massive cheer. The Usos were met with
indifference, although people did get into their little cheering gimmick.
The match was similar to the one they had at TLC, only
here Mizdow didn’t get to tag in at all. He spent the early minutes hamming
around, mimicking ‘The A-Lister’ and being adored for it. After a while the
seriousness of the situation got to him and he asked Miz to tag him in,
reminding him it was for the titles. Miz teased that he would but pulled his
hand away at the last minute, his ego demanding that he and he alone regain the
straps.
It wouldn’t work out for him. Moments later Miz would hit
Jey with the Skull Crushing Finale only for the champion to kick out. A “Mizdow!”
chant rang out through the arena as Miz ran into a super kick from Jey and then
got splashed. The humiliation continued for him when Mizdow snuck into the ring
and hit Jey with an SCF of his own, which Jey again kicked out of.
Mizdow slumped down at ringside in disbelief. Back in the
ring Jimmy reappeared (he’s been inexplicably absent for several minutes) and
gave Miz a splash from the top rope after Jey had sunset bombed him from the
corner. That was enough to put The Miz down for a three count.
Mizdow made no effort to break the pin up and mimicked ‘The
Awesome One’s’ annoyance with him after the match. It wasn’t a bad match but it
was the relationship between Miz and Mizdow that was the focus rather than the
action. That’s not a bad thing but it would have been nice, two matches into a
five match show, to have had a match where the action was the focus.
Theoretically the Divas tag match fit that description.
In practice though it was something approaching a wreck. It started off looking
promising, with Paige and Natalya making lots of swift tags and working over
Brie. It didn’t last though. Eventually the Bellas turned the tables and
isolated Natalya. She spent several minutes working towards and just before she
got it Brie yanked Paige form the apron, leaving Natalya to take a match-winning
forearm from the face from Nikki.
After comments from Roman Reigns, Stardust, Goldust,
Rusev, Miz and Mizdow (who again teased dissension), Big Show (who bizarrely
claimed he's not mortal), Fandango, and Daniel Bryan about their Rumble-winning
plans it was time for the WWE championship match. The first three matches had
been mostly inoffensive and forgettable. This was one of two matches people
were expectign big things from, and they got them. It was the highlight of the
show.
Early contender for WWE match of 2015. |
John Cena got massive heat when he entered first. That
was understandable. The smart fan-filled crowd was never going to give him an
easy time. Seth Rollins got a pop, because he’s someone that sort of crowd appreciates.
But it was defending champion Brock Lesnar, alongside Philadelphia legend Paul
Heyman, who got the biggest reaction of the three.
Seth slipped out of ring as soon as the match began.
Lesnar simply set to work German suplexing Cena. After a few seconds Rollins
saw an opening and returned. He was instantly grabbed for a German suplex but
J&J saved him. That came at a price though: they were left open to Lesnar,
who easily hoisted both of them up for a double German suplex. The next several
minutes were a haze of German suplexes from the champion to both of his
challengers. The crowd ate it up.
Lesnar eventually tired of the suplexes and slapped a kimura
on Cena instead. Cena made it to his knees and then to his feet before Rollins
broke the hold up with a knee to Lesnar's head. Rollins kicked at Lesnar, then
Cena joined him to hit a double suplex on the champ. Cena followed up with an
AA and Rollins stole the cover. Lesnar kicked out at one.
The challengers briefly took out Lesnar by drop kicking
him into the ring steps. Back in the ring Cena hit his belly-to-back suplex and
went for the Five Knuckle Shuffle. Lesnar grabbed him for a German suplex
before he could finish the taunt. Rollins broke up an attempted rolling German
suplex with a super kick then kneed Lesnar in the back of the head to send him
tumbling from the ring. Then one of those rare instances of Cena debuting a new
move occurred. In this case Rollins turned round to take a Michinoku driver,
the most stolen move of the 90s. Maybe he could start using it regularly and
call it the Cena driver.
Rollins got a Blockbuster on Cena (and I was left
disappointed that JBL didn’t namecheck Buff Bagwell). The subsequent pin
attempt was broken up by Lesnar. Cena dropped ‘The Pain’ with a clothesline
then got pulled out of the ring by Rollins, who springboarded back into the
ring looking for a knee to Lesnar's head but got caught and F5ed. Cena broke up
that cover to keep the match alive.
Lesnar German suplexed Cena then left the ring to pull
apart the Spanish announce desk. When he returned to grab Cena he was blasted
with three AAs in quick succession. Rollins pulled Cena off the cover but it
didn't matter because Lesnar kicked out anyway. Rollins gave the champion a
Curb Stomp, which Lesnar took really well, and Cena broke the cover up. Again
it didn’t matter because Lesnar was kicking out.
Lesnar left the ring to recover. Cena followed him out
and speared him through the crowd barrier into the timekeeper’s area, then
pulled him back to his feet and threw him into the ring steps before smacking
him in the head with them, sending Lesnar sprawling onto the Spanish announce
table. A Rollins baseball slide wiped out Cena, who then hit a perfect elbow
from the top rope onto Lesnar, bouncing off of him as he crushed him through
the table.
Cena grabbed Rollins and put him back in the ring. Rollins
surprised him with a small package for two. A super kick earned him another.
Cena came back with an AA attempt. Rollins landed on his feet but then ran into
a pop-up power bomb. Rollins kicked out and fired back with a buckle bomb. He
attempted a Curb Stomp but Cena avoided it, latching onto his leg and pulling
him down into an STF. J&J broke that up and helped Rollins hit a Shield
bomb.
At this point a stretcher arrived for Lesnar and Michael
Cole told us the champion may have suffered a broken rib. The inclusion of such
an overplayed spot was the only negative thing about the match, but it wasn’t
anywhere near bad enough to ruin it.
In the ring Rollins was handed his briefcase by Noble and
Mercury. He tried to lamp Cena with it but was instead sent over the top rope
(lucky he wasn’t in the Rumble match, eh?). Cena then hit a stacked up AA on
J&J. Rollins returned and ate an AA of his own but managed to kick out.
Then they staggered back to their feet and traded punches before Rollins scored
an enziguri and a Curb Stomp for another two count.
Realising he'd need to try something special to keep Cena
down Rollins went up to the top rope and hit Cena with a phoenix splash. But
before he could make a cover he was grabbed and German suplexed by a returning
Lesnar. Cena got one too, sending him rolling from the ring. Another German on
Rollins didn't work out because 'The Future' managed to land on his feet, grab
his briefcase and wallop Lesnar with it twice. He went for a Curb Stomp to
Lesnar on the case but as he came off the ropes Lesnar sprang to his feet and
caught him with and F5 for a successful title defence.
The match couldn't have been better. It was perfectly constructed,
avoiding the awkwardness that often plagues WWE three-ways, and everyone got to
look good. Cena entered one of his best performances in months. Rollins showed
he belonged and was elevated by such a strong performance and not looking out
of place with two far more experienced headliners. And Lesnar's status as an
unbeatable monster was, astonishingly, not only kept intact but enhanced. It
kept viewers guessing and made it clear that the WWE championships and
something. Basically, we don't get matches like this anywhere near enough in
WWE.
And we wouldn't get one in the night’s main event. The
Royal Rumble match closed the show and it's the match that really let the card
as a whole down. The opening half of the match was well put together but the
back half was full of mistakes. It was basically a match put together according
to a booking ethic that is decades out of date. I will touch on this again
below.
The Miz and R-Truth started the match off. It made a nice
change for the Rumble not to begin with someone announced for the number one
spot. The battle from the number one spot has become played out. I was,
however, disappointed that no one on commentary acknowledged the Awesome Truth
reunion.
He's no longer a Bully, he's back to being a star. |
They had a spirited exchange before being joined by
entrant number three, the returning Bubba Ray Dudley. He hit the bionic elbow
on Miz and then hit the Whassup headbutt and the Dudley Death Drop with R-Truth
in the role of Devon. Bubba then eliminated both Miz and Truth as like Harper
wandered out.
They traded some big lad moves before being joined by
Royal Rumble debutant Bray Wyatt. Harper and Wyatt teamed up on Bubba as the
crowd chanted for Devon. Instead they got a Bubba elimination. Bray and Harper
exchanged words and then stepped apart, seemingly agreeing to work together.
Curtis Axel got attacked by Erick Rowan as he posed in
the aisle. The commentary team made it very clear that Rowan was not an
official entrant but Axel never made it to the ring and was never mentioned
again. It’s also worth pointing out that Rowan exited the match over the top
rope. It was a confusing move. If Rowan stole the spot that should have been
made clear. If he didn’t then we should have been told why Axel didn’t make it
to the ring.
Harper and Rowan agreed to go after Bray together (which
got a loud response from the fans) but Harper turned on Rowan and sided with Bray.
Both former henchmen would end up eliminated seconds later as they slumped
themselves over the top rope and Wyatt simply tipped them out. ‘The Man of
1,000 Truths’ then stood in the middle of the ring and roared that it was his
year. The crowd approved.
The Boogeyman, Sin Cara and Zack Ryder all made their way
into the ring. Each was quickly eliminated by 'The Eater of Worlds'. Number ten
fared better. Because it was Daniel Bryan. The crowd erupted into a “Yes!”
chant when he entered. He hit Wyatt with a clothesline, four corner drop kicks,
smashed him with some kicks and then a top rope hurricanrana, all to a very
loud response.
Fandango, Tyson Kidd and Stardust joined the fray. Kidd was
quickly eliminated by D-Bry. Number fourteen was Diamond Dallas Page. He
started hitting Diamond Cutters almost immediately. Stardust got one as he
tried a scoop slam. Fandango was given one off the turnbuckle following a
failed top rope leg drop. Wyatt found a haymaker ducked before he took his. The
crowd loved it. It may not be a bad idea to look at booking Orton this way
whenever he bothers to show back up.
Still a crazy over move after nearly twenty years. |
Rusev entered at number fifteen. DDP tried a Diamond Cutter
on him but Rusev shoved him off and threw him out, quickly doing the same to
Fandango. His faceoff with Wyatt was cut short by a drop kick from Daniel
Bryan, who followed up with kicks to both men. Seconds later the match hit its
turning point when Daniel Bryan was thrown over the top rope by ‘The Super
Athlete’. He landed on the apron but that wasn't enough to save him: Wyatt
charged in and knocked him off, officially eliminating him from the match.
This decision baffles me. This was Bryan's return to
pay-per-view and his first Rumble in two years after being omitted last year
despite being the company's hottest act. The people wanted to see him win the
match. I understand WWE wanting to go with someone else but if the paying
audience is so clearly invested in someone you’re not booking to win it’s a
good idea to keep them in the match for as long as possible so the crowd can
enjoy themselves. I'm sure the argument against keeping Bryan in until the end
would be that it would detract from support for a certain other
"babyface" entrant. But any babyface that wasn't D-Bry was going to
face a tough time with the Philadelphia crowd once he’d been eliminated. WWE
should have known that, embraced it, and kept Bryan in looking like a contender
until much closer to the end of the match. It's what people wanted and it would
have made the match far more interesting.
Goldust entered at sixteen. Stardust tried to eliminate
him as he went for Shattered Dreams but Goldy kept his feet off the floor and returned to give
him a slap. The audience’s response to that and the generic action that followed was to boo and chant for Daniel Bryan.
Kofi Kingston headed in at seventeen (to hefty boos) and
got his annual clever elimination evasion spot shortly afterwards: this year he was
thrown over the top rope and landed on the Rosebuds, who were at ringside for
Adam Rose’s entrance. Rose looked miffed at this as he entered and got lobbed straight out by 'The Bulgarian Brute'. Kofi followed within seconds.
The boos really intensified when Roman Reigns entered at
nineteen, very probably because they could sense what was coming. He got in
shots on everyone before eliminating Goldust and Stardust. Big E also got a
frosty reception for not being Daniel Bryan. Mizdow did much better, bringing
many in the crowd to their feet. He was interrupted by Miz, who told him he was
taking his spot. When he was immediately pie-faced off the apron by Reigns
Mizdow reconsidered (egged on by frantic fans at ringside) and entered the
match. He got in moves on Bray and Big E before being eliminated by Rusev, at
which point he went back to mimicking an irate Miz.
Jack Swagger, Ryback and Kane entered at twenty-two,
-three and -four and did nothing of interest bar triggering a "CM
Punk!" chant (you get one guess at whose entry got that). Dean Ambrose
came in at twenty-five and immediately became the crowd's favourite. Titus
O'Neil followed him in, immediately getting eliminated by Reigns and Ambrose.
It was meant to become a new quickest ever elimination but Titus somehow
botched gravity and lasted longer than the current record of four seconds.
Lucky number twenty-seven went to Intercontinental champ
Bad News Barrett, followed by Cesaro at twenty-nine. Rusev eliminated Big E
with a drop kick before Big Show came in at twenty-nine. A gaggle of guys
swarmed him but he shrugged them off with power.
He quickly formed an alliance with Kane and they threw out out Ryback and
Swags. The final man in was Dolph Ziggler. He immediately swatted Kane, Show
and Bray with super kicks, hit the giants with a double DDT, and eliminated BNB
with a super kick.
Cesaro grabbed Ziggler for a Big Swing then threw him onto
the apron. Ziggler pulled him out and super kicked him to the floor. He
returned to the ring only to take a KO punch from Show. ‘The Giant’ and ‘The Big
Red machine’ then poured him (yeah, poured him) out of the ring. Kane was set
up for a Sister Abigail by Wyatt but Show saved him with another KO punch and
they threw him out too.
A dreadfully booked finish. |
That left Big Show and Kane on one side of the ring with Reigns
and Ambrose on the other. Rusev had quietly slipped out of the ring in order to
do a surprise return later. The Shield lads escaped choke slams and worked
together to topple ‘The World’s Largest Athlete’. Their attempt at tossing him
out didn't work and they ended up getting battered by the large lads. Ambrose
took a choke slam from Show and then got tossed out, leaving just Reigns and
the giants.
It was a scenario which stank of Vince McMahon. The crowd
realised this and chanted “Bullshit!” Cole covered the lax booking by saying they
were unhappy about Bryan and Ambrose being gone. That was true, but the problem was far deeper than that. It had become
clear Reigns was going to win, and not just win but do so via the 80s cliché of
toppling giants. Giants who, as Michael Cole ham-fistedly reminded us, were
very accomplished Rumble performers.
Show tried to eliminate Kane as they worked over Reigns,
leading to a falling out. As they leaned against the ropes, looking vaguely
like they were humping one another, Reigns snuck in to tip them both out. The
match was announced as a victory for him even though Rusev was still knocking
about (and Curtis Axel never even got in). Reigns didn’t get to celebrate for
long: The Authority lads were unhappy at their treatment so they got back into
the ring and gave him a double choke slam. The audience’s response was to chant
for Rusev, previously one of the most reliable heels in all of wrestling.
The Rock's music hit. He stormed down to the ring, gave
Kane a spinebuster and a People's Elbow then gave show a Rock Bottom after Reigns
had given him a Superman punch. At that point Rusev returned. Reigns made short
work of him, spearing him, pointing at the WrestleMania sign (which is a taunt
that always maxes your power bar), and then simply picking him up and chucking
him out.
‘The Great One’ slipped back into the ring to pose with
his cousin as Triple H and Stephanie came out to scowl. This was all part of
Reigns’ elevation package. He was getting the rub from The Rock and being cast
as the anti-authority rebel, WWE’s favourite trope, by being the object of
Tripper and Steph’s displeasure.
It didn’t work. Reigns was subjected to heavy boos as he
posed the show off the air.
It was a dreadful Royal Rumble, characterising everything
that’s wrong with WWE in 2015. They want people to pay for the Network and live
event tickets and all the rest of it but they don't want to push the people
fans want to see pushed. I'm not complaining about Reigns’ win here. It wasn’t
ideal but I expected it and, more to the point we’ve only seen the beginning of
the story with his victory. But Bryan could have lasted far longer and gone out
in a far more impressive manner than he did. The same goes for Ziggler, Wyatt
and Ambrose. The latter two were sacrificed to Show and Kane to make them look good for when Reigns Hulked up
and tipped them out.
Reigns. One of life's winners. |
WWE don’t seem to get how to book for a modern audience.
Reigns' initial victory was earned by him sneakily tipping two big fellas out
as they humped on the ropes. Where's the dynamism in that? He should have been
Superman punching them over the top rope to the ground. If Kane and Show can't
take that bump forget 'em, they shouldn't be there.
A Philadelphia crowd was always going to boo this version
of Roman Reigns. He’s a typical WWE babyface. That’s what Philadelphia does to
them. But I think they would have been happier had a more intense final act
been crafted, heavy on young guys as opposed to men who made their Rumble
debuts well over a decade ago.
As a show this could have been a far worse starting point
for WrestleMania season. The undercard tag matches were inconsequential filler,
which is preferable to being actively bad, while the world title match was an
early Match of the Year contender. It’s the Rumble that dragged the thing down.
There was a right way and a wrong way for Reigns to win. WWE went for the wrong
way.
***
Results summary:
The Ascension defeated The New Age Outlaws
The Usos defeated The Miz and Damien Mizdow to retain the tag team championship
The Bellas def Paige and Natalya
Brock Lesnar defeated Seth Rollins and John Cena to retain the WWE championship
Roman Reigns last eliminated Rusev to win the 2015 Royal Rumble
No comments:
Post a Comment