Reigns figuratively Superman punching rebelling fans in the face. |
The official opener saw tourney favourite Roman Reigns
take on Alberto Del Rio. The reasoning of making this match was sound enough,
it was intended to keep the crowd on side on stop them revealing against Roman.
It achieved its goal because ADR is massively boring and has a confusing
gimmick to boot (he's pro-multiculturalism but we're meant to dislike him for
an unspecified reason). But having your show begin with a man who's main method
of getting heat is being tedious to watch is a bad idea for very obvious
reasons. Reigns went over clean and will show no interest in the United States
title in the foreseeable future.
Things improved with the other semi-final match. That saw
Dean Ambrose defeat IC kingpin Kevin Owens in exactly the kind of gripping affair
everyone expected from them. Even though an Ambrose win seemed likely they
managed to cast doubt on the outcome until it rolled around, in which Ambrose
reversed the pop-up power bomb into a hurricanrana and then hit Dirty Deeds for
the pin.
That was followed by a traditional Survivor Series
elimination match, the only one on the show (although that pre-show bout I
mentioned was one). Rybsck, the Usos and the Lucha Dragons took on King Wade
Bad News Barrett I, Sheamus and New Day. There was fun to be found because New
Day are the best act in WWE. They hit the right mix of fun and threatening
which is exactly right with them portraying heels. Also, Xavier Woods had a new
haircut!
Unfortunately the match wasn't good. There were moments
of delight to be had but there were too many bodies in the ring to avoid blown
spots and sloppiness. The wrong team survived too. This was the perfect chance
for New Day to be established as unstoppable when they're at full strength (it
would have given us another heel victory on the show, which could have been a
help). Instead they were treated as generic heels and, bafflingly, walked out
on the match together after Big E was eliminated. It's not that that went
against character, it's that it was a stupid idea that did nothing to put them
over as an effective trio.
This weird team though... |
Paige's challenge for Charlotte's Divas championship followed
that. This card being relatively light on matches ensured that they got plenty
of time, a shade under fifteen minutes. The match wasn't bad but they weren't
lively enough to hold attention for that amount of time. Too many rest holds
made this somewhat of a chore to sit through. The by-the-numbers ringside
excursion did nothing. Charlotte won with the figure eight.
Tyler Breeze and Dolph Ziggler were only given enough
time to have a match slightly better than what they'd have had on RAW. They
made up for it by having two of the best outfits of the evening. 'Prince
Pretty' looked good, as he should have done in his PPV debut, but the match was
nothing special. He got the win too, again as he should have done.
Interestingly he did so with the move Christian once called the Unprettier.
Apt.
Expert selling from Harper there. |
The match itself was okay. Bray Wyatt and Luke Harper
were wisely picked as the representatives of their Family and got to look
reasonably competitive against the Brothers of Destruction before they took the
loss. That said they were also shown to rely heavily on interference and still
couldn't win, even against a 'Phenom' who was very visibly off his game, quite
possibly feeling the pressure of the moment. Or maybe he was feeling his age.
Harper was pinned by Undi' following a Tombstone. No other pinning combo was an
option: 'Taker had to get the win and Bray couldn't take a loss.
Which left only the main event (although in actuality it
didn't). Notable omission of a handshake at the start aside, odd because of the
brother versus brother narrative WWE was going with and their well-established
on-screen friendship, the two had an entirely believable and completely natural
face versus face match. Neither was too aggressive, both got in an abundance of
their signature moves and high spots. They packed in plenty of near falls too,
although it's possible too many of them relied on finishers. With only ten
minutes to play with it did feel a very busy match at points.
No heel turn here. |
Triple H hit the ring. He applauded Reigns and raised his
hand before offering a handshake. Reigns responded with a weak spear. Sheamus
then showed up, Brogue kicked Reigns, and officially cashed in his Money in the
Bank contract. Even when losing to a surprise cash-in Reigns was kept strong,
kicking out of the move (which not let forget has been well protected over the
years) before falling to a second.
There's more to Ireland... dan dis! |
Instead we got yet another sneaky heel champion aligned
with The Authority and Michael Cole bleating about history being stolen. This
is not the stuff that memorable pay-per-views are made of.
***
Results summary:
Roman Reigns defeated Alberto Del RioDean Ambrose defeated Kevin Owens
Ryback, the Usos and the Lucha Dragons defeated Bad News Barrett, Sheamus and New Day
Charlotte defeated Paige to retain the Divas championship
Tyler Breeze defeated Dolph Ziggler
The Undertaker and Kane defeated Bray Wyatt and Luke Harper
Roman Reigns defeated Dean Ambrose to win the WWE championship
Sheamus defeated Roman Reigns to win the WWE championship
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