Showing posts with label Money In The Bank. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Money In The Bank. Show all posts

Friday, 30 September 2016

Money In The Bank 2015

Image Source: Amazon
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Running Time: 184 Minutes
Certificate: 12
Number Of Discs: 1
Studio: Fremantle Home Entertainment
Released: August 24 2015

(To read a full event review of WWE Money In The Bank 2015, click here.)

Money In The Bank has generally been one of the best WWE events each year since it began, and the 2015 show was no different. The DVD of the card is now available, and there are three major matches which make the sixth MITB PPV another memorable instalment. Since it took place days after the tragic passing of Dusty Rhodes, the show opens with a ten-ball salute, and later we get a very good video tribute to the American Dream.

In the ring, besides the Kick-Off Show bout between King Barrett and "King What's Up" R-Truth (which is here as a DVD extra), the action begins with the 2015 MITB Ladder match (Roman Reigns vs. Sheamus vs. Randy Orton vs. Kofi Kingston vs. Neville vs. Kane vs. Dolph Ziggler) which is a great start to proceedings, even if the match is a shade inferior to the 2014 MITB encounter. Nikki Bella vs. Paige is a good effort despite the screwy ending, and the Ryback-Big Show bout also has a questionable finish, although The Big Guy and The Very Big Guy make the most of their fairly short time before the conclusion.

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Friday, 19 August 2016

Money In The Bank 2016

Image Source:
Fetch Publicity
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Running Time: 198 Minutes
Certificate: 12
Number Of Discs: 1
Studio: Fremantle Home Entertainment
Released: August 22 2016

(To read a full event review of WWE Money In The Bank 2016, click here.)

(Thanks to Fetch Publicity for arranging this review.)

Hyped up as "the greatest Money In The Bank Pay-Per-View in history", MITB 2016 didn't quite surpass the outstanding 2011 card, which had several high-quality matches and was capped off by the unforgettable John Cena-CM Punk main event. It was, however, the best supershow of the year thus far, and the DVD release allows you to relive this memorable event.

The opening Fatal Four Way match for the WWE Tag Team Titles, pitting The New Day against Enzo and Cass, Gallows and Anderson and The Vaudevillains, is a good opening contest and, despite some botches near the end (one of which, by Gallows, was so obvious on the night that it has been edited out here), the participants maintain crowd interest all the way. Baron Corbin vs. Dolph Ziggler came after their rivalry had peaked, making this a satisfactory yet ultimately unwanted match to those in attendance. The women's tag bout (Charlotte and Dana Brooke vs. Becky Lynch and Charlotte) is okay but feels more like a Raw match, although it does have an unexpected twist after the finish.

Sheamus vs. Apollo Crews will be remembered fondly in the future if Crews goes onto achieve main event status in WWE; hopefully, the Draft will allow the talented Apollo to begin rising up the ranks on SmackDown. We then come to the first of three major matches on this show, the first-time clash between John Cena and AJ Styles. Supported by a hot crowd, this is an excellent encounter, featuring a topnotch performance by AJ (the layout of the match means that around 70% of the offence, and great offence at that, comes from Styles). The only black mark against it is the slightly anticlimactic finish, although it was clearly designed to set up a rematch further down the line; as Taz pointed out on his (highly enjoyable) radio show The Taz Show, WWE could have come up with a more creative way to extend the feud than what we got here.

The Money In The Bank Ladder match (this year starring Dean Ambrose, Kevin Owens, Sami Zayn, Chris Jericho, Cesaro and Alberto Del Rio) is a tremendous spot-fest, and one of the better MITB matches to date. (I should have mentioned that the promo segment involving KO, Y2J and ADR after the Tag Team Title match is well worth watching as it contains some hilarious banter between the three men.) Rusev vs. Titus O'Neil for the United States crown is another match that would have been better on Raw, for it existed here solely to allow the crowd to recover before the main event; in this spot, the match was never likely to succeed. Finally, the main event between Roman Reigns and Seth Rollins for the WWE Title is a very good match, and another strong headline performance by the much-maligned Reigns. Rollins shines in his first match since his injury from the previous November, and post-match we get a huge moment which I won't spoil here; all I will say is that you should watch this right up until the very end of the show.

Because the MITB event lasted well north of three hours, the card has been condensed somewhat to make the DVD running time. Some advertisements during the card and the Kick-Off panel in-show reaction segment are not here, which admittedly is not a great loss. What is annoying, though, is that there are no extras whatsoever, meaning that both Kick-Off Show matches (The Golden Truth vs. Breezango and The Lucha Dragons vs. The Dudley Boyz) are absent. This is a card which really should have been released on a two-disc DVD so that the main card wouldn't have been stripped down, as slight as the cuts are to the PPV itself, the Kick-Off bouts could have been included, and some other extras could have been thrown in too. Hopefully, WWE will think about this going forward, given the rumours that three-hour+ PPV events could be the norm going forward, at least for the bigger cards.

This aside, Money In The Bank 2016 is well worth watching and, therefore, the DVD of the show is well worth owning.

Overall Rating: 8/10 - Very Good

Monday, 20 June 2016

WWE Money In The Bank 2016

Image Source:
Champions Of The Champions
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Genre: Wrestling
Produced By: WWE
Format: Pay-Per-View
Date: June 19 2016
Location: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
Attendance: 14,000

In the run-up to the latest supershow, WWE was hyping it as "the greatest Money In The Bank PPV ever". The card certainly looked promising beforehand, with two potentially great singles matches and the annual MITB Ladder war. But, like with the "New Era" talk, it was WWE overdoing the self-promotion rather than letting the fans decide (it hadn't even happened when WWE was stating this about the card). As things transpired, it was definitely a night to remember as the main matches lived up to the hype, and there was a major development to end the show - but was it truly the best MITB to date?

On the Kick-Off show, we had two matches on this occasion, both of which were tag team matches (incidentally, Jerry Lawler was absent from the pre-show due to a suspension brought about by problems at home). The first pitted Breezango against The Golden Truth. Goldust and R-Truth have had a very slow build to the formation of their comedy tag team, and once they did form, they have lost multiple times to the new combo of Tyler Breeze and Fandango. But Breezango were at a big disadvantage here because, the previous Monday, they had been sharing a sunbed at the same time (which was funny in itself) and GT turned up the heat quite literally, resulting in them supposedly being near-burned to a crisp. This made them look ridiculous (think Rodney Trotter in the hang-gliding episode of Only Fools and Horses), and made even their slightest movements painful for the heels to absorb. Admittedly, this did raise a few laughs before Goldust finished off Fandango with the Final Cut (or whatever Goldust calls his finisher these days) to finally get a win for The Golden Truth.

The other pre-show match saw The Dudley Boyz battle The Lucha Dragons. This was more serious than the previous clash, and it followed the usual structure (as most doubles bouts do, to be fair) of the heels dominating and wearing down an isolated babyface before his partner gets the inevitable tag to try and turn things around. That's exactly what happened, and cue some decent double-team spots towards the end. An inadvertent clash between D-Von and Bubba Ray was followed by the Luchas avoiding the 3D and taking D-Von out to the floor, before Bubba tasted a Salida Del Sol from Kalisto and a Senton Bomb from Sin Cara, with Cara pinning Bubba for the victory. Something tells me that the seemingly-subtle miscommunication between The Dudleyz could lead to a split and Bubba going on a solo heel run, especially with the Draft approaching. Besides, the Dudleyz have lost to just about everyone now.

Oh, yes: the Draft. Since Extreme Rules, a new brand extension has officially been announced, and is set to begin from mid-July. Therefore, this PPV would be the last before the latest big split. This will have major implications on WWE, from the call-ups of more NXT talent to the re-signings of previous stars to the addition of more PPV events to the possibility of re-introducing a second World Title (which I believe would be a mistake). I will do a story in the next few weeks which will include a mock Draft for the Raw and SmackDown rosters, but in the meantime Money In The Bank would be the final major card before things will be shaken up. Incidentally, neither of the two probable General Managers, current Raw head honchos Shane and Stephanie McMahon, appeared at any point during Money In The Bank.

MITB officially began with a four-team match for the WWE Tag Team Titles, as The New Day defended against Enzo Amore and Big Cass, The Vaudevillains and The Club combo of Luke Gallows and Karl Anderson. The pre-match scenes featured some choice banter from New Day, and some, well, less entertaining dialogue from Enzo and Cass. This may not be a popular opinion, but I think that Enzo and Cass, while they do provide some witty one-liners, are not quite as funny as fans are making them out to be. Unlike New Day, whose daft comedy at least has some sort of thread to it, and is usually pretty humorous, Enzo and Cass (Enzo primarily) will often be talking about something totally unrelated and, in my case anyway, totally loses the viewer. I'm not saying that the recent NXT call-ups are never funny, because they do come out with some funny stuff here and there, and I appreciate teams who come out with funny lines when they actually are funny, but I suspect that if Enzo and Cass hadn't come directly from NXT, fewer fans would enjoy their act. I also predict that at some point within the next 12 months, the team will be split up with Cass going solo and pushed towards the main event level ... at which point some fans will begin to turn on him (more on that later).

Anyway, this opening contest for Money In The Bank was a really good multi-man affair. All of the teams got a chance to shine in their own way, from the slow, methodical approach of Aiden English and Simon Gotch to the powerful domination by Gallows and Anderson to the more flashy offence by the babyface teams, including a Cass-assisted dive to the floor by Enzo. The match unfortunately had several noticeable botches towards the end, in what would become a theme of the show: Kofi Kingston barely caught Enzo with Trouble In Paradise, and their reactions made it obvious that an error had occurred. Enzo seemed to have Aiden pinned for the win following his big splash, but it was the referee's initial drop to the canvas that seemed to suggest a first count (thus making people believe this ended up getting a three-count) as opposed to there being a true botch here. More notably, after the Magic Killer by the Club seemed to finish English off, Big E grabbed Anderson for the Big Ending, but Gallows strangely didn't react, and somehow ended up on the opposite side of the ring where Cass clotheslined him to the floor, after which the New Day levelled Anderson and Big E pinned Aiden for the win. Besides the clear botches towards the end, this was a strong opening, and it had the right outcome with New Day holding onto the straps for now, and with the Club and Enzo and Cass protected from tasting the losing fall. I foresee The Club vs. The New Day at Battleground as Enzo and Cass continue to build momentum, which could lead to the NXT graduates getting their big moment at SummerSlam.

After a brilliant backstage segment involving Kevin Owens, Alberto Del Rio and Chris Jericho which had several laugh-out moments, we had the latest match in the series between Baron Corbin and Dolph Ziggler (whose attire paid tribute to Shawn Michaels circa SummerSlam 1995, as much of Ziggler's act does these days). This suffered from the fact that the feud had entered overkill. The NXT call-up Corbin targeted Ziggler the night after WrestleMania 32, yet it was Ziggler who won their Payback Kick-Off scrap. Baron won a Raw rematch, and would win another bout (under No Disqualification rules) on the Extreme Rules Kick-Off. That should have drawn a line under the feud, but after Ziggler demanded a technical wrestling match on Raw, which ended quickly after a deliberate Dolph low blow, we ended up getting another Baron-Dolph match here (which incidentally was originally scheduled to be on the Kick-Off show once more along with the later Apollo Crews vs. Sheamus match, but the line-up was switched to include the earlier two tag bouts).

This was a competent effort, but being the fifth proper match between the two on television (six if you include the very brief "technical" match from Raw), nobody was interested. This was embodied by the "Boring!" chants during the bout, and a certain section even chanted "Ziggler sucks!" Dolph's character is staler than a gone-off loaf of Warburton's right now, and Corbin doesn't have enough charisma to draw fans into matches at this point. Matters weren't helped when Ziggler stumbled over the steel stairs (another botch) prior to taking a painful-looking Deep Six slam on the floor at ringside. They did have a nice exchange where Corbin threw Ziggler off of a Famouser attempt, followed by Baron then avoiding a superkick to drill Dolph with an almighty clothesline. Baron eventually won it with the End Of Days. This simply has to be the end of the rivalry now, as Corbin could move onto another popular babyface (perhaps Cesaro or fellow newcomer Apollo Crews). For Ziggler, a heel turn and a character change is a must, which could coincide with next month's Draft to have increased impact.

Match three was another tag team match, as Women's Champion Charlotte and her new partner-in-crime Dana Brooke battled Natalya and Becky Lynch, stemming from their shenanigans involving the first three at Extreme Rules (Becky has since sided with Natalya). Fans annoyingly began chanting "We want Sasha!" within seconds of the bell ringing, although to be fair there was no real reason to care about this match. Sure, Charlotte is progressing as a hateable heel character (she kicked Ric Flair to the curb the night after the last PPV), but Dana is too inexperienced and too little is known about her for fans to really care. Add to that the lack of belief that Natalya will actually dethrone Charlotte and the fact that we've already seen the Charlotte-Becky feud at the turn of the year, and you have a match which largely existed to fill time. The action was also fairly unmemorable; this should have taken place on Raw with a Fatal Four Way happening here instead. After a Natalya/Becky collision instigated by the heels, Natalya took the fall to give another boost for the heels (which was slightly surprising, since hints have already been dropped that the Charlotte/Dana alliance won't last long). Nattie burst into tears afterwards, which is never good for a babyface in the modern age.

So, it was a nice twist when Natalya unexpectedly turned heel on Becky afterwards with a sudden attack, seemingly blaming her for the loss. This freshens up Natalya's act and should lead to Becky vs. Natalya over the coming weeks. In the meantime, Charlotte and Dana will probably have a (premature) fall-out based on Dana occasionally bungling in her attempts to assist the increasingly-arrogant Charlotte and a likely Women's Title match at Battleground, before a bigger Women's Title match at SummerSlam (could this be the night when Sasha Banks finally wins the big prize?). As some have pointed out, the Women's scene hasn't exactly been flourishing lately, ever since the disappointing title match at Extreme Rules. Hopefully, the division will pick up over the next few weeks, because most of the pieces are in place; WWE just needs to make sure that the right women are in the right positions, and given plenty of time to make magic as some of them did previously in NXT. The division is stronger now than it was a year ago, but more needs to be done if the ladies are to truly thrive.

Apollo Crews' biggest match to date was next when he battled Sheamus (actually, this was also his PPV debut). Unlike Corbin vs. Ziggler, which was past the point of being fresh, this was a new bout, and consequently this match was a more interesting prospect than Baron vs. Dolph. It was a pretty good big-man match with several unique moves that you wouldn't normally see from men of their size, such as a cool-looking moonsault from Crews off the ring apron onto a grounded Sheamus at ringside, and the Celtic Warrior hitting White Noise off the ropes to his younger opponent. The theme of this match was that Apollo represents the "New Era", which Sheamus is against since it essentially tries to portray him as a thing of the past. Nevertheless, this would be the newcomer's night, as he withstood the ropes-assisted White Noise and rolled up the Irishman for the win to a strong reaction.

Apollo's future looks bright, especially now that he has added a bit more aggression to his game. With further character development and a chance to display more of his surprisingly-agile repertoire, Apollo could be a major player, especially after the Draft when he will probably receive more opportunities on television. It's possible that his feud with Sheamus will continue as they demonstrated some good chemistry here. Sheamus' future looks less certain; he will remain a featured heel on whatever show he ends up on, but the chances of him reclaiming a spot in the main event scene over the next six months seem very low. He's still a very accomplished wrestler, though, and this was a strong effort by both, which succeeded at making Apollo look like one to watch in the future.

We then had what WWE was hyping up as a "dream match" between John Cena and AJ Styles. While I don't recall many fans in the mid-2000s wondering what would happen if Cena ever fought Styles, it did nevertheless sound like a very intriguing prospect, as the biggest WWE star of the post-Attitude Era and the longtime face of TNA and other promotions would be going one-on-one for the first time. The story was that AJ wanted to make an impact by targeting Cena upon his return, turning heel in the process, but in order to do so and to avoided being "buried" by Cena (was he being too honest with this?), he needed help from The Club. But Cena challenged AJ's courage to the point where Styles signed on for a match whereby Gallows and Anderson would be banned from ringside - supposedly, anyway.

The crowd was well into it as the bell rang with both men receiving loud chants, providing that big-fight feel to this first-time clash (no pun intended). The match started a bit slow as Styles took his time, essentially making Cena wait and trying to frustrate the 15-time (or 14-time depending on your opinion) World Champion. From there, some nice back-and-forth exchanges eventually led to AJ taking control of the bout, demonstrating his versatility in the process as his offence in this match differed greatly from his babyface performances earlier this year. Cena would fight back and lock AJ in an STF, which Styles broke free from. Another botch led to AJ landing awkwardly on the ropes, which was followed by Cena very loudly asking Styles if he was okay (which was nice of him to enquire about, but couldn't he have done so quieter?) and blatantly calling spots, which took me out of the moment for a while. A Five-Knuckle Suffle by Cena also went badly, as the announcers even pointed out. Fortunately, things picked up from there as there were many big moves, from an Attitude Adjustment to a Phenomenal Forearm to ringside to a great exchange that led to the Calf Crusher (which was triggered by an AA attempt) to a Styles Clash. The action was all of a high standard, living up the expectations, if not quite matching the classic Cena-CM Punk match from MITB five years prior.

Following a painful-looking Cena double-knee counter to an AJ 450 Splash, There was a ref bump as Cena hit a second AA, at which point Gallows and Anderson ran out despite the match stipulation (the ref was down, remember) and dropped Cena with the Magic Killer, allowing AJ to pin Cena for the win. Many were annoyed that Styles didn't win cleanly, but come on; he's a heel. I know that Kevin Owens and Brock Lesnar have pinned Cena clean in recent times, but if Styles (who gets cheered despite his heel status as it is) pins Cena clean-as-a-whistle, then he loses heel heat because, well, why would you boo him if he can get the job done anyway? This finish, while recycled and a bit cheap, does extend the Cena-Styles feud until Battleground at least. There still needs to be something else before then to really give Cena a reason to keep fighting (Cena's dad could be brought in once again to take a beating or something), and if AJ eked out a win at Battleground (even if it were by DQ after Cena perhaps gets frustrated), it could lead to a major grudge match at SummerSlam where Cena wins the feud (which he will). Regardless, this was a really good match, just a notch below true "Match Of The Year" status, and hopefully we'll get an even better bout when the two meet again.

After that, we got this year's Money In The Bank Ladder match, which also had the potential to be a great one. The 2016 cast consisted of Dean Ambrose, Kevin Owens, Sami Zayn, Cesaro, Chris Jericho and Alberto Del Rio (WWE initially stated that there would be seven entrants, but for some reason this was changed; an oversight on This Week In WWE gave away that Kalisto was supposed to be the final entrant). Of the six, only Y2J and ADR truly would not need the win (although Jericho has had a strong few months, meaning a victory here could be justified), but based on momentum and popularity, the favourites had to be Ambrose and Owens. If Ambrose won, there would be the potential for a third Shield member to win the WWE Title (more on that later), and fans have been clamouring for Ambrose to win the big one for a long time. As for Owens, his heel character is tremendous, combined with his strong in-ring skills, and having KO carrying around the case and performing a villainous cash-in to win the top title would be a treat to see.

The entrants paired off for separate brawls to kick off the match, which soon lent itself to the ladders being used as weapons (Del Rio whacked Ambrose hard with one of the ladders at ringside). There were several non-ladder dives, most notably a Sami Zayn senton onto his opponents at ringside, and a non-stunt as Owens set up a ringside ladder cannonball for Zayn, only to skip the jump and smack Sami in simple fashion. From there, the ladders were suitably introduced, and we got a plethora of great spots. They included ADR (who had his best performance in months here, perhaps since his return at Hell In A Cell) trapping Cesaro at the top of a ladder with the Cross-Armbreaker (which ended with Owens superkicking an upside-down Del Rio, and Cesaro leaping off the ladder to use the ropes for a springboard uppercut to KO in a fantastic triple spot sequence), Cesaro being sent face-first into a ladder by KO after drilling most of his opposition with consecutive uppercuts, Zayn nailing Owens with an extremely painful-looking Michinoku Driver that saw KO land spine-first onto a leg of a grounded ladder, KO powerbombing Sami hard onto another ladder, Ambrose hurling himself off the top of a ladder to hit a standing elbow drop, and Y2J pulling Ambrose off a ladder to catch him with a Codebreaker. An extended brawl which saw two ladder bridges created using a standing ladder took a bit too long, although it did feature the visual of three brawls all going on at once with the prize dangling inches from all six. During this sequence, Del Rio took a hellish fall which almost saw him break his neck; it's possible that he was injured in this spot, but if that's true, the extent of his pain remains to be seen. In the end, Ambrose fought Owens off this ladder tower and took that final step up to unhook the MITB briefcase to a great reaction; Ambrose was Mr. Money In The Bank 2016!

I would normally speculate on when/where Ambrose could cash in, but you'll soon find out why that would be a pointless exercise. At this stage, I'll simply say that Ambrose more than deserved his big moment after so many near-misses. What did bother me was how many fans who were rooting for Ambrose to win the WWE Title at Survivor Series last November, the Royal Rumble in January and the Number One Contender's main event from Fast Lane suddenly weren't happy at Ambrose winning here, insisting that he wasn't the best choice. This acts as concrete evidence that some fans will never, ever be satisfied. If you're not an Ambrose fan, that's fine. If you wanted, say, Kevin Owens to win, that's fine. But if you were strongly backing someone to succeed and, when he does, you express displeasure, then there's something wrong. It's no wonder that WWE does not cater to many of the "boo" brigade and has persevered with Roman Reigns' push. Or, at least, it did ... but more on that shortly.

At this point, we were already down to what would normally be the final 30 minutes of the PPV. But rumour had it that WWE planned to take Money In The Bank beyond the three-hour point, and this was confirmed when we got (the admittedly-already announced) Rusev vs. Titus O'Neil match for the United States Title. Titus won a Father Of The Year award, so having his kids at ringside on Father's Day was a nice touch (many alleged that Titus actually kissed one of his kids on the lips before the match, and were baffled as a result, but I don't recall seeing this). The match began unusually as both big men clashed with a double clothesline at ringside, almost leading to an early double-countout. From there, the action was decent, but it was clearly the cool-down match, and fans seemed a bit tired after watching Cena vs. Styles and MITB consecutively. Rusev won by submission with the Accolade, and continued his recovery as a major heel by standing in front of Titus' kids and telling them their father is a loser, and shouting "Happy Father's Day!" Great heel move there.

Titus could get a rematch on Raw, but another PPV encounter seems unlikely after the submission victory for the Bulgarian Brute here. It could be the Draft that determines Rusev's next opponent in the event that it is an NXT call-up or even a former star (WWE is apparently reaching out to many past names about returning in time for the brand extension). Apollo Crews, Sami Zayn or Cesaro are also contenders to challenge Rusev next for the title. One thing is for sure, the heavily-rumoured Rusev vs. John Cena feud revival doesn't appear to be happening anytime soon, which is probably a good thing. Incidentally, remember when Rusev was dominating everybody in 2014 and commentators and wrestlers alike wanted to stop his anti-US brigade? And have you noticed that nobody has similar intentions during Rusev's current reign? There's a simple explanation: that storyline no longer applies to Rusev.

Finally, we have the main event between Roman Reigns and Seth Rollins for the WWE World Heavyweight Title. Rollins returned from injury at the end of Extreme Rules to Pedigree Reigns, leading to this match announcement. Though some were disappointed by the build-up for this match, it still had the potential to be a really good headline attraction, and there was obvious appeal in seeing Rollins return and to see the former Shield members clash. This match was meant to happen at two previous PPV events, at Night Of Champions 2014 and Survivor Series 2015, but injuries to Roman and Seth respectively prevented each bout from happening. This also marked the third (of three) different possible combination of Shield members in a singles main event, following Rollins vs. Ambrose matches in 2014/5 and Reigns vs. Ambrose (coincidentally at the aforementioned Survivor Series). And this wouldn't be the last Shield link to this show ...

The match started a bit slowly, although Reigns soon took the upper hand and began acting ever-so-slightly heelish (oh, by the way, yes he was booed again here) with some condescending comments to Seth as he was beating him down. Rollins would fight back with a tope and later a senton to ringside, but Reigns brought the fight himself with a range of major power moves. More villain-like taunting from Roman was followed by Rollins fighting furiously out of the corner in the manner of a babyface, and to no surprise this was another moment in the match when the fans were almost fully behind Seth. Seth attempted the sunset flip from the top rope that led to Seth's previous injury, but fortunately there was no problem here as he picked up Roman and sent him flying with a turnbuckle powerbomb (Roman took a second turnbuckle powerbomb later on). The big moves came from there as Rollins drilled Reigns with a flying knee, Roman caught Seth with a Superman Punch, Roman Speared Rollins for a close near-fall, a ringside Spear attempt was missed as Seth moved and Roman hit the ringside barrier hard, and in the move of the match, Rollins intercepted a Spear attempt into a Pedigree for something very close to a three-count. But Rollins would rally, and he responded with another Pedigree for a clean-as-a-sheet pinfall win to regain the WWE World Heavyweight Title to a rapturous ovation. The Roman Empire had been vanquished, and Rollins - who had never lost the WWE Title prior to his November 2015 injury - was back on top. That Reigns lost, and was pinned cleanly, was a big surprise, but there was more to come.

Dean Ambrose's music hit, as fans realised that a MITB cash-in was about to occur. Rollins looked towards the aisle for the arriving Ambrose, but the Lunatic Fringe came from behind to whack Rollins with the briefcase. Cue the usual histrionics as the bonus match was officially announced, and Ambrose planted Rollins with Dirty Deeds to pin him and win the WWE World Heavyweight Championship! Fans were positively giddy that Ambrose, for so long the nearly-man, was now the man. Some fans complained online, but I covered that earlier. Regardless, it was a huge moment, which would have had more impact had it not been telegraphed in the Ambrose Asylum segment the previous Monday on Raw. Nevertheless, Ambrose had finally won the big one, meaning that all three Shield members have won been WWE Champion, which has to make that group one of the greatest factions in wrestling history. More impressively, the chain of events here meant that on the same night (and within minutes of each other), all three Shield members had been the WWE Champion. (It's also fitting that Rollins, who won his first WWE Title by cashing in MITB, lost the title here via a cash-in.) In addition, Ambrose became only the second man (after Kane in 2010) to cash in MITB on the same night that he won it.

It was a great end to a very impressive show, which also sets up some intriguing future storylines. As well as the continuation of the John Cena-AJ Styles rivalry, and the main event shenanigans seem to hint at the long-awaited Triple Threat match between all three Shield members for the WWE Title. It should be saved until SummerSlam (it's clearly happening this summer, so WrestleMania is out of the question), since it would be a major main event for the biggest event of the season, but it's possible that we get it at Battleground (which is the next PPV) and one of the members ends up in another match at SummerSlam (if, say, Reigns ended up facing Brock Lesnar again and we got Ambrose vs. Rollins for the gold at SummerSlam). More intrigue comes from the possibility of who will play babyface and heel in the three-way saga. They could all stay in their current roles, and Ambrose will probably remain a face (if he was turning heel, he would have cashed in on Reigns), but it's possible that Rollins will go face. If so, that necessitates someone turning heel, and after his mannerisms during the match and his clean loss, it is very possible that Roman Reigns could finally turn heel. He could be frustrated that his title has not only disappeared from his ownership, but that his "little buddy" now holds the title. Imagine the heel heat if Reigns destroys Ambrose in reaction to the events of MITB, and a similar beating to Rollins could turn Seth face. It might even happen as soon as the post-MITB edition of Raw. It's possible that none of this will occur and that Reigns will regain the title as an unpopular babyface, but if that is the case, then the booking of Roman here was questionable to say the least. Let's hope for the best, eh?

To answer the question I posed at the beginning, this wasn't quite the best Money In The Bank card ever (that would be 2011), but it was a close second, and the best PPV of the year so far from an in-ring standpoint. The triple main event all delivered as promised, and the major developments at the end were very welcome (to most) and set up an eagerly-anticipated rivalry for the summer months. Besides Cena vs. AJ, the rest of the WWE landscape is harder to predict due to the upcoming brand extension, which will have taken place by the time of the next supershow, Battleground. I will write my predicted Draft within the next few weeks, and the split will change WWE in many ways. Before then, though, we got a great Money In The Bank event, and for Dean Ambrose, it was the biggest night of his career. Hopefully, it is the first step towards a very eventful and memorable summer season in WWE.

Overall Rating: 8.5/10 - Excellent

Sunday, 5 June 2016

WWE Money In The Bank 2013

Image Source: Wrestling
DVD Network
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Genre: Wrestling
Produced By: WWE
Format: Pay-Per-View
Date: July 14 2013
Location: Wells Fargo Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Attendance: 15,000

Having been the recipient of its own PPV event for four years now, and with the match having originally debuted back in 2005, it's safe to say that the Money In The Bank Ladder match, as an entertainment spectacle, has probably passed its peak. Whereas the early bouts (held annually at WrestleMania) were about showcasing the young talent who could potentially become future main eventers, in an environment which suited their athletic styles, since 2010 the MITB PPV has seen twice as many matches of this nature, thus partly diluting each one, whilst also casting either headliners who need not require MITB to get ahead or performers whose size or style do not make them suitable participants to what is, at its essence, a stunt match.

Fortunately, though, there are enough worthy performers whose styles do suit the environment and their creativity has been of a high enough standard that the Money In The Bank Ladder match remains one of the must-see matches of the year, perhaps only behind the Royal Rumble match and the featured bouts at WrestleMania. This year, there were once again two MITB bouts, each with a very different casting, but with both promising plenty of thrills and spills. And the match does still provide a boost to the winner when the briefcase ends up in the right hands, meaning that there is still genuine intrigue to the results of these matches; and, again, the casts on this particular night offered up some intriguing possibilities if they were to win. So, plenty to look forward to then, even if the stipulation has lost some of the appeal that it once had. Add to that the return of Rob Van Dam to WWE in one of those bouts, two World Title bouts and some potentially exciting mid-card bouts, and you have the makings of what could be a pretty memorable PPV extravaganza.

On the pre-show, we had a WWE Tag Team Title match between Shield titleholders Seth Rollins and Roman Reigns and The Usos. Whereas pre-show bouts generally have a stigma attached to them (namely, that those involved aren't considered important enough to appear on the main PPV card), this was a notable exception; as a matter of fact, this fast-paced, action-packed doubles battle was as good as any non-Ladder match that we would witness all night. Credit to all involved, who made a special effort to kick off MITB (well, the night as a whole) with a bang. Hopefully, those in charge noticed these strong performances by all four. Reigns won it by pinning Jimmy Uso after a Spear.

Money In The Bank itself opened with the first MITB Ladder match. I forgot to mention before that the end of the brand extension in 2011, which has resulted in there being two World Titles at a time when it is unnecessary, has also hindered the stipulation because it has been made clear (as did the placement of this particular MITB clash) that the World Heavyweight Title, once considered the equal of the WWE Title, is by no means on level pegging these days, so the same applies for the respective MITB bouts. In any event, the blue briefcase was hanging over the ring for what was unusually an all-heels MITB clash, with none of them really receiving a true push en route to the show. Whilst this felt like poor planning by WWE, it did make for an unpredictable match, since nobody knew who would win out of Dean Ambrose, Cody Rhodes, Damien Sandow, Wade Barrett, Jack Swagger, Antonio Cesaro (the latter two of whom have recently formed the Real Americans tag team under the management of Zeb Colter, even though Cesaro is Swiss) and Fandango (who was already in the ring when the PPV began, and of course had the rabid Philadelphia crowd Fandangoing).

Although the heel alignment of each participant meant that the fans had to essentially choose for themselves who they wanted to win (which you think would have suited a smarky crowd like Philadelphia), it didn't make the match any less enjoyable; indeed, this was a worthy MITB bout with plenty of eye-catching stunts. Of note, we saw Fandango hit a huge legdrop over a ladder, Swagger and Cesaro using a ladder as a bridge only for Ambrose to try and use this as a platform to win, and a big sunset flip off another ladder by the ballroom dancer. There was also interference by Rollins and Reigns to try and help Ambrose win, which was repelled by the also-interfering Usos. But Cody Rhodes was the standout performer with a dominant performance that seemed to turn him babyface; certainly, the fans reacted positively to his spots, particularly a Muscle Buster (which is the signature move of indie icon Samoa Joe). It seemed like it was Cody's match to win, but his Team Rhodes Scholars partner Damien Sandow (who comparatively did little during the match) shoved Cody off the ladder, allowing him to unhook the briefcase and win the match. Sandow winning MITB was a surprise, as he will need plenty of favourable booking to make him a genuine World Title contender. Of greater note, though, was that this seemed to signify Sandow killing off the Scholars team, which should see Cody become a babyface. This was definitely a good start to MITB, and set a standard for the other MITB bout participants to try and surpass later on.

Before The Miz challenged Curtis Axel for the Intercontinental Title, we had an in-ring segment where the recently-fired Vickie Guerrero, who for some reason was still here at MITB on the pre-show panel, tried to give herself a farewell address only for the fans to reject it, as well as new Raw GM Brad Maddox, who played a video of Vickie's most embarrassing moments in WWE. This went on too long and would have been more suited to Raw than a PPV event. It was only ended when Miz came out, meaning that for perhaps the first time ever, fans were genuinely happy to see The Awesome One (I kid).

Miz vs. Axel, or Axel vs. Miz if you prefer, was alright. Miz is still a babyface, but it's still a little hard to truly get behind him due to his arrogant, narcissistic ways. Axel continues to receive a moderate push by WWE, despite unnecessarily losing a non-title match to Chris Jericho recently. The two matched up fairly well and delivered a solid but unspectacular match. Axel will be happy with his performance (as will Miz, to be fair), but he still needs to show something else if he is to live up to the potential that WWE and Paul Heyman have tagged him with. Speaking of Heyman, Miz had him ejected by using Eddie Guerrero-style tactics (pretending that Heyman interfered when he hadn't), which usually would be an effective spot, but in ECW country, it was the equivalent of a red rag to a bull. It didn't really affect the outcome, though, as Axel beat Miz cleanly to retain the gold. Thanks to Miz removing the ECW owner from play, this resulted in Axel being cheered for his win.

We then had a rematch from Payback, and a welcome one in this case, as AJ Lee defended the Divas Championship against Kaitlyn. These two blew everyone away at the last PPV event by delivering the best women's match seen in WWE for many years, possibly ever (seriously). And they delivered again here with another fine, logical and well-executed match which put most of the other females on the roster to shame. It was slightly less enjoyable than their Payback match, but I think that was because nobody was expecting the Payback bout to be as good as it was, whereas for this rematch at Money In The Bank, people realised that it would be good (and it was). In terms of execution, it may have been superior to the Payback match, but it lacked the element of surprise as far as its quality, thus resulting in this rematch having a lesser impact.

As stated, though, this was still very enjoyable, and had we not seen them meet at Payback, people would be saying that this was the best WWE women's match for many years, if not ever. The story of the match was that AJ continuously worked on the arm of Kaitlyn, not only weakening it for her Black Widow submission, but also to reduce Kaitlyn's chances of winning if she were to hit her own finishing move, the Spear (too many people use that nowadays, by the way). And her plan paid off handsomely: following some good exchanges and a strong comeback by the challenger, Kaitlyn did hit the Spear, but her arm did prevent her capitalising, and AJ did take advantage by slapping on the Black Widow, which resulted in a submission victory. Kaitlyn fortunately didn't burst into tears afterwards to ensure that hardcore fans booed her, as she did at Payback. Unusually, I hope that this female feud continues, because their matches have been exceptional by the standards of the women's division.

Next up, Chris Jericho battled Ryback. This felt like a filler feud for both established stars, and that's what it proved to be; bear in mind that part of the reason for this happening was that Jericho had been chastising the Big Guy with chants of "Cry-Back!" Even by the often-childish standards of Y2J's sense of humour, this was a tough one to buy. It still meant a fresh match between a popular veteran and one of WWE's newest stars, though, so it was still a welcome addition to the PPV.

Ryback dominated much of the match, although his periods of control were probably a little too slow and drawn-out. This heel turn of Ryback's still doesn't make sense to me, and after losing his feud to John Cena at Payback, even matches like this won't make up for main event scenarios, which Ryback could be waiting a long time to attain again. Jericho made a good comeback and brought the occasionally-disinterested crowd back into the match, and after some nice exchanges and close calls (a Codebreaker by Y2J almost saw Ryback counted out; credit to the heel on this occasion that he didn't walk away satisfied at losing in this fashion and ran back into the ring before the 10-count), Ryback won in slightly anticlimactic fashion when a missed Lionsault allowed the Big Guy to roll Jericho up for the pin. Ryback remains the recipient of a decent push, then, but as stated his main event adventures could be limited going forward. Match quality was okay, but I expected slightly more.

This was followed by the World Heavyweight Championship bout, another rematch from Payback as Alberto Del Rio defended against Dolph Ziggler. If you recall, ADR and Ziggler appeared to switch sides in a double-turn at Payback, en route to Del Rio regaining the World Title. Since that show, it has been essentially made official: Del Rio is now 100% a heel again, and Ziggler is almost certainly a babyface now (which should please the hardcore fans who have been backing him for so long). Del Rio was disadvantaged on this night to a minor extent by the absence of his personal ring announcer Ricardo Rodriguez; on television, we were told that he wasn't around because of injuries suffered at the hands of Ziggler (in reality, Rodriguez is serving a 30-day suspension for a Wellness Policy violation).

In contrast to their Payback match, which told a story that at times overshadowed the moves on display, this rematch was all about the action, and that action was of a high standard, all before a red-hot crowd. Indeed, the Philadelphia audience were enthralled by the back-and-forth wrestling, the big bumps, the high spots, the near-falls; everything, basically. This was the big-bumping, smart-wrestling Ziggler at his best, and Del Rio put in a very effective heel performance as well. The finisher attempts and reversals and submission escapes (when ADR tried to trap Dolph in the Cross-Armbreaker) were of a high standard, and the match seemed to lean towards a big finish. So, it was a bit disappointing when it ended with a disqualification, after AJ Lee (Dolph's damsel in distress, or whatever she is) ran in and unnecessarily hit Del Rio with her Divas Title. Fans booed loudly, a) because it denied Dolph a World Title win, and b) because the finish could have been a lot better, especially for such a good match. Certainly, it looks like a Dolph-AJ split is happening to cement Ziggler as a babyface, which presumably will mean a split from Big E Langston too. The only thing is, where does this leave Dolph in regards to trying to regain his World Title from Alberto? Did his title chase end here?

John Cena defended the WWE Title against Mark Henry in the penultimate bout. Such a match prospect may not seem appealing, but on this occasion there were some positives to the meeting. It was a fresh match for PPV (they have never met on PPV, believe it or not). It was Henry's first WWE Title opportunity on PPV (he has previously been World Champion, but he hasn't had a WWE Title bout on a supershow). Similar to Royal Rumble, this being the title match meant that some strong and suitable talent could be featured in the MITB bouts. And it followed Henry's greatest ever WWE moment when he pretended to announce his retirement on Raw the night after Payback, only to swerve-turn on Cena to a huge pop. What made this so awesome was Henry's very convincing performance; in the back of my mind watching that angle, I was thinking that there could be a swerve, but he was so good at conveying his faux retirement speech that you could never be completely sure. If anything, a real bowing-out seemed more likely; so when he did turn around and drop Cena, it was a "Holy s--t!" moment. Credit to the often-criticised Henry: his performance on that night was truly outstanding; his career highlight from a performance standpoint, bar none.

This match, whilst fought at the expected slow pace and with the anticipated focus on power moves and attempted power moves by Cena, was better than expected, meaning that it ultimately served a purpose. Henry even kicked out of the Attitude Adjustment once Cena had finally hit the AA, which led many to wonder if this would be Henry's time. But when Cena also withstood a World's Strongest Slam, the outcome became obvious, and indeed Cena won the match and retained the WWE Championship when he countered another Slam attempt by Henry into an STF for the submission victory. Overall, this rivalry ended up being a success, which you could argue is doubly impressive considering who was involved.

The main event would be the All-Stars Money In The Bank Ladder match for the WWE Title/red briefcase (great way to make the other MITB participants feel important). This pitted CM Punk against Daniel Bryan, Randy Orton, Christian, Sheamus and the returning Rob Van Dam (who received a massive pop upon his return in the old ECW home base; Bryan and Punk also got great pops). Kane was meant to compete, but an attack by the debuting Wyatt Family on Raw took him out of contention, and WWE strangely declined to replace him (that angle, incidentally, was marred at smarky fans chanting "Husky Harris" at Bray Wyatt). By the way, this was an all-babyface MITB match, which followed what began as an all-heel MITB match earlier in the evening.

This was a long and mostly impressive collection of stunt spots. Humorously, everyone targeted the posing RVD to begin the bout, to the expected boos. Sheamus then took control to more boos after he had been taken out by the remaining four participants, before Van Dam re-entered the ring and unleashed his greatest hits on his opponents. Sheamus set up a ladder bridge between the ring and an announcer's table at ringside, only to taste a hard knee by the flying Bryan (the flying goat?). The Celtic Warrior got revenge later with his ten punches to the chest to Bryan on the ladder, with the crowd chanting "No!" to each one in an amusing moment. Punk stopped Sheamus from there and used him and a ladder as something resembling a surfboard, before Orton caught Punk with a hard T-Bone Suplex onto a ladder. A back-and-forth exchange between RVD and Christian (who had a belter of a Ladder match on Raw back in 2003) led to RVD hitting Captain Charisma with a Five-Star Frog Splash off a ladder to a massive pop (incidentally, this move ended their aforementioned Ladder bout from a decade earlier).

The great action continued as Bryan took control and basically levelled everybody with kicks, running clotheslines and dives through the ropes; Bryan exerted an amount of control which would have once been unimaginable in a WWE ring, much to the approval of this audience. This included knocking Sheamus off a ladder out to ringside and onto and through the aforementioned ladder bridge (the landing looked nasty as hell). Unexpectedly, Curtis Axel ran in to cut off Bryan's ascendancy with a neckbreaker variation, but CM Punk knocked Axel away (despite both being friends with Paul Heyman, Punk has called Axel out as a nuisance), saying he wanted to win this match himself. An angry Heyman came out and agreed, willing Punk to climb. However, Heyman then turned on Punk by slamming a ladder into his head several times; the last of these opened up a massive cut on Punk's skull. Heyman had officially turned his back on Punk, in response to Punk telling Heyman after Payback not to manage him anymore, but that they could remain friends (more on that later). This opened the door for another man to win, and after Orton dragged RVD off a ladder into a huge RKO, it was Orton who climbed the ladder and won the match and the WWE Title MITB briefcase.

This was a very entertaining end to an exciting PPV, and it was proof that even after all these years and the reduced appeal of the stipulation, the talent alone can make MITB a must-see attraction every year; both MITB matches were great for slightly different reasons. Add to that a really good ADR vs. Ziggler match, strong showings in the Tag Team Title and Divas Title bouts, and respectable matches pitting Ryback against Jericho and Cena against Henry, and you end up with a pretty damn good PPV event. It didn't quite surpass the classic MITB 2011 event, but it wasn't that far off, which has to be a good thing.

The show also set up an intriguing storyline, as Punk and Heyman are now officially at war. Since Brock Lesnar attacked Punk the night after Payback, with Heyman initially denying that it was done as revenge for Punk essentially dumping Heyman, it is clear that we will get Punk vs. Lesnar at SummerSlam, which could be fantastic if booked correctly. Cena's next opponent for the WWE Title was determined by Cena himself on Raw the night after MITB, with the approval of Brad Maddox, and Cena chose Daniel Bryan; again, this could be a very good match, although a Bryan title win seems unlikely. It's unclear who will face Del Rio for the World Title next; it might be Ziggler, although he has an issue with AJ and probably Big E to fix, which could delay his next World Title opportunity (assuming he gets one).

To sum it up, then, Money In The Bank 2013 was a thrilling PPV event (even the pre-show match was really good), and it continues the trend of strong PPV showings for WWE in 2013, which will hopefully be carried on by what promises to be an eventful SummerSlam.

Overall Rating: 8.5/10 - Excellent

Wednesday, 25 May 2016

WWE Money In The Bank 2014

Image Source: WWE
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Genre: Wrestling
Produced By: WWE
Format: Pay-Per-View
Date: June 29 2014
Location: TD Garden, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Attendance: 15,653

The fifth annual Money In The Bank supershow was preceded by the unfortunate news that Daniel Bryan's neck injury, which was originally supposed to keep him out of action for only a matter of weeks, would now put him on the shelf for months, meaning that he was forced to relinquish the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. It's a shame that Bryan's hugely memorable title win at WrestleMania XXX ultimately led to a short reign due to injury, but it's hoped that the long rest will be enough for Bryan to fully recover and come back better and healthier than ever, whenever that might be.

Bryan's injury meant that the vacant title would be decided in an eight-man Ladder match at MITB (he would have defended the gold against Kane in a Stretcher match had he been cleared for a return to the ring). Whilst there was intrigue over who might win the championship, a quick analysis of the contenders (and of the roster in general) meant that there was only ever likely to be one winner, especially after the apparent leaking of a poster for SummerSlam which appeared to give away the planned main event for the biggest show of the summer. Let's keep tight-lipped about that for now until things properly develop, and we'll stick to Money In The Bank and the crowning of a new WWE Champion.

Although Bryan couldn't compete in the ring, he did make an appearance on the Kick-Off Show to a loud ovation. He filled fans in on how his recovery was going, before being interrupted by Bo Dallas, and the two shared a humorous exchange which ended with Bryan telling him to "Bo-Leave!" It was good to see Bryan here, considering that we probably won't be seeing him again for some time.

Kicking off the PPV was a WWE Tag Team Title match between The Usos and The Wyatt Family team of Luke Harper and Erick Rowan. This had been built up slowly over the previous few weeks, beginning with a lengthy brawl during the Last Man Standing bout between John Cena and Bray Wyatt at Payback. Six months earlier, such a match might not have seemed like an enticing prospect, but the improvement that Rowan and Harper have showed, combined with their strong teamwork (a perfect example being alongside Bray against The Shield at Elimination Chamber), suggested that this could be a really good doubles match, and that's exactly what it proved to be, which also allowed The Usos to continue building what is turning into a pretty memorable reign as Tag Champs.

Harper and Rowan isolated Jey and prevented him making the tag to Jimmy for some time, using their power to unleash quite a beating on him. Jey eventually managed to wriggle away from the swamp monsters and make a tag to Jimmy, where things truly picked up. There were plenty of big moves as the finish line approached, from Samoan Drops to a corkscrew plancha to powerbombs to suicide dives to superkicks. In the end, Rowan tasted a perfectly-executed top rope double suplex, followed by stereo splashes for the win. This was one of the best regular tag team matches in a long time in WWE, and although the Wyatt challengers lost here, the action was so good that few would complain if there was a rematch. The slow build-up to this feud suggests that it won't be all said and done after this first PPV encounter.

Match two saw Naomi challenge Paige for the Divas crown. The build-up to this one was a bit odd. Paige has been the new babyface, erm, face of the women's division since her debut the night after Mania XXX, but with AJ Lee absent, her heel opponents were limited to Tamina Snuka and Alicia Fox. Therefore, for MITB, WWE tried something different with fellow babyface Naomi as her contender. The weird aspect was that Naomi's Funkadactyl partner Cameron has made it clear that she disapproves, to the point that she has shown complete ignorance during Naomi's recent matches. That seems to be setting up a Naomi/Cameron split, but the way it is being executed means that rather than us thinking that there is trouble in the Funkadactyl camp, it's coming across more that Cameron is not interested whatsoever in whatever is happening in the ring, which is harming the presentation of the characters and the feud, as well as the prestige of the Divas Title; if a regular competitor makes it clear that the match doesn't interest her, why should it interest the audience?

And the crowd were understandably not that interested either, probably because they have been given little reason to care. This should have happened on Raw or SmackDown with the intention of setting up Paige vs. whomever and Naomi vs. Cameron, because it was obvious that Naomi wasn't winning the title here, and the presentation made the whole thing feel second-rate. This was despite the effort of the women, who did their best under the circumstances. Paige sealed the victory with a DDT, to the subtle (or not-so-subtle) delight of Cameron. Hopefully, WWE will find better competition for Paige, because whilst she has given the women's scene a boost, the lack of credible opponents are threatening to make her title run a disappointment. Hopefully, WWE will advise Cameron on better ways to showcase jealousy as opposed to coming across as not giving the slightest toss about a match which was apparently important enough to be featured on a Pay-Per-View event.

Next up was Damien Sandow vs. Adam Rose. Sandow was dressed as Paul Revere as part of his recent impressionist gimmick. Rose won quickly. Next!

Okay, I'll analyse it a bit. Rose as a newcomer is gathering momentum, and is becoming rather popular (look no further than the reaction he received on the London episode of Raw; I know because I attended it, largely because it was my birthday), but it remains to be seen how far he can progress. The forecast looks far gloomier for Sandow, though, whose career is close to hitting rock bottom. Hopefully, he can rebound because he showed a lot of promise in 2012-3, but he has yet to recover from his failed Money In The Bank cash-in; his current role has the potential to be a career-killer, especially if he keeps losing while impersonating whomever it may be.

After a promising start, the show had kind of flat-lined over matches two and three, but fortunately it was about to pick up in a big way with the annual Money In The Bank Ladder match with the MITB contract at stake (only one this year, since the WWE and World Titles were unified back at TLC). To be honest, I felt that this looked less appealing than most bouts of this ilk in recent times due to the lack of true contenders; of those involved, most felt like filler, either because of previous MITB wins or because they were here solely to provide spots. Fortunately, that still meant we were probably going to get a memorable spot fest, and that's exactly what we saw; although it felt like the least significant MITB match to date, it was still one hell of an effort by all.

Unlike previous MITB clashes where it was about the briefcase and nothing else, this one had the additional layer of Dean Ambrose looking to get revenge on Seth Rollins for his shocking betrayal of Shield members Ambrose and Roman Reigns on Raw the night after Payback. Their exchanges were a continuous theme of the match, but the other competitors (Dolph Ziggler, Kofi Kingston, Rob Van Dam and Jack Swagger) also had their moments. (Oh, by the way, Bad News Barrett was meant to be included, but an injury suffered on the pre-MITB edition of SmackDown ruled him out.) The most notable spots were Kofi being shoved off a ladder only to use the top rope as a springboard for a crossbody onto his MITB foes, Kofi and Dolph dragging each other off the top of a ladder and in two completely insane moments, Rollins taking a hellacious backdrop off a ladder onto another ladder (the landing looked like controlled chaos, and looked brilliant, but must have hurt so much!), and Ambrose hitting a suplex to Rollins off the top of an unbelievably high ladder. One can only imagine how much pain everyone was in after this ended, especially Rollins who took the two biggest bumps. But his punishment was rewarded, as a Kane Tombstone took out Ambrose, allowing Seth to scale the ladder and become Mr. Money In The Bank 2014.

After Triple H proclaimed Seth to be the future once he joined The Authority, his MITB win here puts Rollins in a commanding position. A potentially superb feud with Ambrose is only in the early stages, and should his push continue, the former ROH and NXT Champion could be in a position to seize the WWE Title in late 2014 or early 2015. It's hard to see how he could defeat the likes of John Cena or Brock Lesnar should one of them hold the title in the winter months, but hopefully he will be promoted effectively enough that such an occurrence would not be out of this world. Either way, whilst many questioned the wisdom of The Shield being split up, it certainly feels right now that all three members could benefit more from the faction splintering, for which WWE has to be commended. As for the outcome: as noted, most of the cast were there for the spots as opposed to having a serious chance of winning, so besides Ambrose, Rollins was the only possible winner, and so few could argue with the result.

After Cody Rhodes teased a heel turn at Payback, following his and Goldust's defeat to RybAxel, it seemed like we were getting the much-awaited Goldust vs. Cody feud. Instead, after Cody unsuccessfully tried to provide suitable new tag team partners for The Bizarre One, Cody unexpectedly transformed into Stardust. Imagine Goldust without the Tourette's Syndrome, the implied homosexuality, the Shattered Dreams ... okay, it's hard to explain, so just imagine Cody Rhodes dressed as Goldust, and you have Stardust. Fans at the Raw episode where this character was unleashed didn't know how to react, and it seemed like this audience at Money In The Bank were confused too. Goldust and Stardust were teaming against RybAxel on this night, which depending on your point of view is either a rematch from Payback or a fresh offering. I lean towards the former.

The action was standard stuff; it was well-executed, but after the thrills and spills of the Ladder match, this had that dreaded "filler" feeling to it. Stardust impressed me by almost offering a completely different move set to Cody, which helps to make Stardust more than just Cody Rhodes in Goldust's outfit. Stardust got the win with a roll-up on Ryback (how far has he fallen over the previous 12 months?), and the brothers Dust repelled a post-match Curtis Axel attack. It looks like WWE is going ahead with Goldust and Stardust as a team, which is something few were expecting. Hopefully, this will have a purpose, and it will still probably culminate with some form of Cody-Goldust feud, but if that is the plan, then WWE is setting it up in a pretty unique way.

Following that was a rematch between Rusev and Big E. Whereas their Payback match was better than expected, this was a slight disappointment, probably because they had unleashed enough cool spots in their previous PPV meeting that in a rematch, and with less time due to the bout being positioned later on the card, there was little new to see. Big E's spear through the ropes to the floor always looks impressive and it did again here, even if it nearly always looks like Big E is close to decapitating himself with the move. Once again, Rusev came out on top, this time managing to make Big E submit to the Accolade.

Although this bout was inferior to the original bout in Chicago, it was still watchable, and it assists Rusev as he slowly moves up the card. Big E has taken a tumble recently with three consecutive supercard losses, so unless WWE has something up its sleeve or directs Big E towards Sheamus and his United States Title, the big man could be treading water for a little while going forward. Oh, and after the match, Stephanie McMahon had Brie Bella removed from the arena; Brie was backstage as a guest of her twin sister Nikki, despite having quit at Payback. This appears to be leading towards a major match of some sort, although I'm not sure whether it's a bout that a lot of people really want to see.

Layla vs. Summer Rae with Fandango as the special guest referee was yet another filler match; by my count, the fourth of the show, which was at least three or four too many. To me, a filler match is something which either has no reason to exist or is no different from a match on Raw or SmackDown. So, the two Ladder matches on this card would not be classed as filler. Nor would the Tag Team Title bout, since it was part of a clear rivalry and was very enjoyable. Rusev vs. Big E wouldn't be considered filler since the two big men had an issue, basic as it was. But Paige vs. Naomi (no feud), Damien Sandow vs. Adam Rose (zero tension), Goldust & Stardust vs. RybAxel (a Raw match transported to PPV) and this one were all designed solely to fill time, as opposed to provide PPV-worthy action or to settle a major score. Most supercards have at least one filler match, which is fair enough, but this had four! Sure, the Ladder matches meant that there were fewer wrestlers available to fill the rest of the PPV time, but surely more could have been done to make the other 90 minutes-two hours of the card worth watching.

To be fair, there was an issue in this match because Fandango dumped Summer Rae (on Twitter, hilariously), then went for Layla, and now both women hated each other because of Fandango, hence this bout. The reason why this was filler is because the action was pretty poor, and nobody in the arena cared about the match. I am happy with comedy storylines as long as they're, well, funny; this one unfortunately wasn't. Layla picked up the win, and afterwards both girls put Fandango in his place. If Damien Sandow's prospects look bleak, then Fandango's future seems even less bright. Okay, Sandow's is probably worse; at least Fandango is still playing the role of Fandango.

Fortunately, we did get a match of significance after this one, which was the main event for the WWE World Heavyweight Title. This was an eight-man Ladder match (note to WWE: if a MITB prize is not at stake, it is not a MITB match) between John Cena, Randy Orton, Bray Wyatt, Sheamus, Kane, Cesaro, Alberto Del Rio and Roman Reigns, with Triple H and Stephanie McMahon sat at ringside. With Bryan injured, one of these eight men would win the title - but were they really eight potential champions? Kane and Del Rio were never winning this one. Bray Wyatt and Cesaro would have been fresh titleholders, but a short-term title reign (which this match was likely setting up) might have done more harm to their careers long-term. Sheamus has the United States Title already. Roman Reigns is considered to be a future main eventer, perhaps even one day taking John Cena's spot as the top babyface in WWE, so again a rushed title win here might have done more bad than good.

So, it was between longtime main eventers Cena and Orton. Orton regaining the gold for the Authority seemed the most logical move. However, shortly before Money In The Bank, there were heavy rumours that Amazon had accidentally leaked a poster for SummerSlam, featuring a certain part-timer in the role of the challenger - which, given that particular person's heel status, seemed to confirm that it would indeed be John Cena winning this match. If that didn't emphasise who would be winning, then the fact that Cena's face was the other one on the poster confirmed it. Oops! To be fair, Cena vs. (mystery wrestler) makes more sense for the match to have a face/heel dynamic, and since this seemed to be the substitute for Daniel Bryan defending the title against the opponent not to be named, then it was probably better for Cena to have the title for now and then pass it on at SummerSlam, since he would not be harmed by the defeat.

Back to the match itself, then. The main event lived up to the hype, even if it couldn't quite provide the kind of hair-raising spots which we saw in the MITB Ladder match earlier in the night. Of note, Wyatt looked dominant at various points, but less so than Reigns, who continued to build his momentum as a future main eventer. Kane and Orton worked together at first, but they had a bit of a tiff later on when Kane realised what was at stake, Authority association be damned. Orton had a rough night as he was busted open unexpectedly when Reigns clocked him with a ladder, and the wound was pretty severe. Reigns, to his credit, made the most of it by targeting the heavy cut with a bloodthirsty expression, as opposed to ignoring it and pretending it never happened. Orton was stitched up at ringside, but returned to the ring in time to drill Cesaro with the move of the match, a pull off the ladder to Cesaro swiftly followed by a high RKO. But it was to no avail, as Orton tasted an Attitude Adjustment onto Kane (after Kane himself took an AA), and Cena climbed the ladder to win the WWE World Heavyweight Championship (15 by WWE numbers; 14 if you exclude his reign as the "second" WWE Champion back in the summer of 2011) to the dismay of the Authority leaders.

As noted, under the circumstances, Cena was probably the best, if not the only, choice to win here. Assuming that he is sacrificed to the challenger-whose-name-I-won't-reveal-to-avoid-providing-a-spoiler at SummerSlam, Cena won't lose any ounce of his aura, but the same could not be said for many of his opponents here. Many will complain about Cena winning, but as detailed, everyone else would not benefit, not so much from winning but from the inevitable title loss coming the way of the new champion. Besides, it's Cena, coming right after Daniel Bryan's title win at WrestleMania XXX, so of course people are going to complain. Incidentally, the fact that Cena now appears to be in the role of caretaker champion could be the first true sign that WWE is trying to move away from the Cena era of dominance, and perhaps one of the competitors in this match (hint: his initials are RR) will be the go-to man for WWE in the future, perhaps as soon as WrestleMania 31.

I enjoyed Money In The Bank, or at least I enjoyed the main matches. The two Ladder matches were fun, and the battle for the briefcase was tremendous. Add to that the really exciting tag team match to open the show, and you have a pretty good PPV, in spite of the mountain of filler content between the matches that mattered. In fact, had the rest of the show been up to scratch, this could have been the best event of the year. As it was, the top three matches were all very good in their own way, but the sheer number of insignificant bouts reduced the overall enjoyment of the show. Nevertheless, overall Money In The Bank was once again a success, and the rise of Seth Rollins adds intrigue to what will hopefully be an eventful summer season for WWE.

Overall Rating: 7.5/10 - Good

Tuesday, 8 September 2015

WWE Money In The Bank 2015

Image Source:
Champions Of The Champions
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Genre: Wrestling
Produced By: WWE
Format: Pay-Per-View
Date: June 14 2015
Location: Nationwide Arena, Columbus, Ohio, USA
Attendance: 15,277

Money In The Bank has often been one of the top WWE Pay-Per-View events of the year. This year, the card promised two Ladder matches (one of which was MITB) and a rematch of John Cena-Kevin Owens from Elimination Chamber. Combined with a number of under-card matches, then, expectations were fairly high going into this show that it would be a barnburner. In the end, though, I felt that while there was a true Match Of The Year contender and the action was largely good, the show overall still felt slightly underwhelming, and while it was by no means a bad card, it had a couple of flaws preventing it from being a truly memorable event.

Money In The Bank began, rightly, by paying tribute to the recently-passed Dusty Rhodes. The American Dream was one of the biggest names in wrestling history, and his respect level within WWE and the wrestling industry was underlined by the entire roster, headed up by Vince McMahon, Triple H and Stephanie McMahon, as the bell tolled ten times with wrestlers and fans standing in silence to show respect to Dusty. This was followed by his music playing once more, with fans spontaneously clapping along, making it an even more touching moment. But what really did bring me close to tears was the video tribute to Dusty, shown a little later on the card, which perfectly encapsulated what Dusty meant to so many and what he achieved. Although the video tributes are generally speaking unfortunate to have to watch (because they are playing after a performer has died), they are brilliantly compelling and excellently produced, and WWE does a great job of having you smile when reliving fond memories before feeling upset when they end with the final graphic paying tribute to the fallen hero. That definitely was the case here, but was even more notable on the MITB Kick-Off show when host Renee Young genuinely broke down in tears and delivered her subsequent links while not being shown on camera because she was so upset having known Dusty and then watched this tribute. The whole situation is just so sad, but WWE paid tribute to Dusty perfectly here. If anything, this was the most memorable aspect of the entire card for me.

By the way, on the Kick-Off show itself, R-Truth pinned King Barrett as part of their feud which is seeing Truth strangely believe that he is the King despite Barrett fairly winning the KOTR tournament in April. I don't understand this, nor why Truth would pin Barrett with the (real) King clearly still having the potential to be a future main eventer in WWE. Hopefully, WWE will explain this in the coming weeks, and as funny as Truth can be at times (I did laugh at his apparent confusion with interrupting a pre-MITB promo on Raw involving several entrants, only to be told that he wasn't in the match to his surprise, which led him to then simply leave the stage to plenty of laughs), I hope he doesn't win this rivalry; if Barrett doesn't ultimately defeat Truth, then his future is bleak in the company. And that would be Bad News for Barrett.

The first match on the main MITB card was this year's Money In The Bank Ladder match, which involved Roman Reigns, Randy Orton, Sheamus, Dolph Ziggler, Neville, Kofi Kingston and Kane. The field was a little hit-and-miss, although there was enough talent and star power to make this another worthwhile MITB entry. Kofi this time had The New Day trying to help him win this match, and it was interesting to see how many people thought Kingston was really going to win MITB. I personally thought that Reigns would come out on top, especially after his brutal powerbombs onto Neville, Kingston and a ladder within moments of each other. Neville himself took some great chances, and the latest Orton-Sheamus rivalry continued to slowly build. But I still thought it would be Roman's night ... only for a totally unexpected interruption by Bray Wyatt, who tipped over the ladder with Reigns on it followed by a delivery of Sister Abigail to the ex-Shield member. I wasn't sure who would win after that, but I felt disappointed when Sheamus won after slightly striking Neville off the ladder moments after Wyatt's interference. Partly because the final sequence wasn't very memorable, and partly because despite his heel turn, Sheamus doesn't strike me as the fresh, future chosen one who you would normally hope would win this match. If anything, I think the result is set up for Sheamus to lose when he cashes in MITB (and if it's within the next few months, I hope that is the case because I particularly enjoy seeing Seth Rollins as WWE World Heavyweight Champion), or it was a reaction to those saying that Reigns winning was a foregone conclusion and deeply predictable. They were proved wrong! Overall, though, a good MITB match, but not one of the best that we've seen.

Match two pitted Nikki Bella against Paige for the Divas Championship, set up by The Bellas using Twin Magic to prevent Paige becoming champ a few weeks prior on Raw (marking what I believe is their third turn of the last seven months, or ten months in Nikki's case). Paige promised beforehand to win it for Dusty, which was a nice touch (Dusty was heavily involved with NXT, and had a big role in the development of Paige during her time there; she was actually the first NXT Women's Champion). That promo, combined with Nikki's lengthy reign, Paige's popularity and the general staleness of WWE's Divas scene, made me think that Paige was definitely coming out on top and winning the Divas Title. But it didn't happen: after a rather good match, Paige pinned Nikki to a huge pop, only to learn that, erm, she didn't pin Nikki. Brie Bella had switched places and fallen prey to a roll-up, so when the referee pointed this out, Nikki ran back in and hit the Rack Attack to win the bout and retain the gold (or silver, or pink). Fans weren't very happy, and neither was I (I wouldn't have been too fussed had we not heard Paige dedicate the match to Dusty beforehand). Actually, some believe that the finish itself WAS a tribute to Dusty (if you Google "The Dusty Finish", you'll know what I mean). Regardless, Nikki remains Champ, and I now feel that it will require a call-up from NXT to change the WWE Divas division for the better.

Following this was the intriguing Intercontinental Title match between Ryback and Big Show. They exchanged several big moves, but after no more than a few minutes, The Miz (who had provided commentary on the match) ran in and attacked both men, causing a double disqualification. This is an obvious sign of a future Triple Threat match, and most probably a Ryback-Big Show rematch. Hopefully, Ryback will triumph because neither Miz nor Show will reach greater heights than they already have. What annoyed me about this match didn't actually happen here: on an episode of Miz TV on the previous Raw, Ryback easily hit Big Show with Shell Shocked. That should have been saved for the feud-ending match, or at least this bout in terms of its first appearance; a potentially memorable moment was thrown away, and perhaps telegraphed that it wouldn't end the bout at MITB.

We then got the second part of the John Cena-Kevin Owens feud. They had delivered above expectations at Elimination Chamber, especially with Owens shockingly pinning Cena, but given their styles and the staleness of Cena, was it realistic that we would get a superior match here? Amazingly, the answer was yes: this was the best singles match in WWE all year. Cena-Owens 2 was a borderline classic, a brilliant back-and-forth war which included tons of big moves. Owens survived two AA's and withstood the STF; Owens couldn't get the job done even after two Pop-Up Powerbombs and several huge manouevers. There is a slight negative to the fact that there wasn't much in the way of selling after so many big moves, but on this occasion it was only minor. This was a superb bout, easily the highlight of the show, and perhaps its greatest achievement is the fact that Owens wasn't damaged by the fact that he lost. A third AA beat the NXT Champion, but afterwards Owen rejected a handshake and attacked Cena, and hit him with a powerbomb on the ring apron (Cena was lifted with less ease and slammed with less impact than Sami Zayn had been on previous occasions by Owens), forcing Cena to be stretchered out of the arena. A five-star match in my opinion, and if anything losing this one has made Kevin Owens more of a star than he was beforehand. The perfect example of a newcomer who was enhanced despite defeat, and it looks like this surprisingly excellent rivalry will continue.

After the Dusty video tribute, we got a WWE Tag Team Title scrap between The New Day and The Prime Time Players. New Day have been on a roll since winning the gold at Extreme Rules, and with Tyson Kidd recently being injured, I assumed that this would be a transitional scrap for TND while WWE looked for a new set of challengers, especially given that the Players, despite being entertaining more often than not, generally don't come across as championship material. However, I was wrong. After a decent tag match, Titus O'Neil hit Xavier Woods with the Clash Of The Titus for the pin (fans were clearly not expecting it to be the victorious move, nor I think for the PTP to even win, which resulted in a sudden surprise pop). O'Neil and Darren Young are Champs; The New Day had a bad day. Still, despite this unexpected result, I feel that the Players won't be champs for long, and that New Day will once again reign as titleholders. Besides, New Day Rocks! (According to them, anyway.)

The main event pitted Seth Rollins against Dean Ambrose in a Ladder match for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. The culmination of the Rollins-Ambrose feud, this of course promised thrills and spills due to the Ladder stipulation, and with Rollins being told that he had to win this all on his own, many were expecting this to be a huge career night for Seth. Plus, who was to say that Ambrose wouldn't actually win this one and keep the WWE Title that he had been in possession of since Elimination Chamber?

However, in the final surprise of the evening, the match was a bit of a disappointment to me. This was partly due to what seemed like a subdued crowd (possibly worn out by Cena vs. Owens), although they did pop and chant "This is awesome!" on occasion. But I think it was because there just wasn't enough going on. The intensity of previous Ambrose-Rollins matches wasn't really there, at least in the beginning. It also didn't help that the match was very long; with about ten minutes shaved off, this would have been a better match and there would have been less filler. Speaking of which: I don't want to criticise the participants for not taking enough chances because these matches are dangerous, but without that truly memorable spot, this felt like a protracted main event where the chances they did take were good, but not great. What I mean is this: at WrestleMania, you remembered the massive suplex by Barrett to Stardust, the powerbomb that Ambrose took from Luke Harper, the elbow that Ambrose dropped onto all of his opponents at ringside. As risky as these moments were, they were memorable. Here, nothing was memorable, so although the combatants took great chances and put forth great effort, to me it felt a bit pointless.

The final negative to this match was the lack of selling, especially by Ambrose. Towards the end, Rollins hit Ambrose with several brutal powerbomb throws at ringside, the last onto a pile of ladders and chairs. When I saw this, I thought "That's got to be over". No way was Ambrose getting up. But then he sprinted up the ladder to stop Seth. Had he at least made a slow attempt which proved unsuccessful, it would have been more believable, but it came across far too hokey. Moments later, they both tried pulling down the WWE Title at the same time and both did pull it down, but it landed in Rollins' hands and he won the match. A clever end to a match that was actually very watchable, but just went on too long and, overall, ended the long-running Rollins-Ambrose feud on a slightly damp note.

Overall, Money In The Bank 2015 was worthwhile. The opener was good but had an odd result, the Divas match was better than expected, the IC Title scrap was short and overall a disappointment, and then we got a fantastic Cena-Owens match. But the Tag Title match was uneventful and the surprise finish felt a bit abrupt, and the main event was just too long and, despite the grapplers clearly grafting, didn't deliver the classic Ladder match that we had all hoped for. It didn't match previous Money In The Bank shows, and it could be argued that this was actually a one-match card thanks to Cena vs. Owens, but I still enjoyed MITB and am interested to see where the developing storylines go from here.

Overall Rating: 7.5/10 - Good

Thursday, 2 April 2015

WWE Money In The Bank 2011

Image Source: Sports Keeda
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Genre: Wrestling
Produced By: WWE
Format: Pay-Per-View
Date: July 17 2011
Location: Allstate Arena, Rosemont, Illinois, USA
Attendance: 14,815

For this week's retro event review, the focus turns to a more recent classic: Money In The Bank 2011. On this night, there were two great MITB Ladder matches, a very good World Title bout and a tremendous main event which had a brilliant build-up, a red-hot crowd and positioned CM Punk as a permanent main eventer.

The card kicked off with the SmackDown Money In The Bank match which involved Wade Barrett, Heath Slater, Justin Gabriel, Daniel Bryan, Sheamus, Kane, Sin Cara and Cody Rhodes. There was no real favourite but plenty of viable contenders and, with a good blend of talent and styles, there were plenty of big moments, the most notable being a Sheamus powerbomb through a horizontal ladder to Cara, who left the match afterwards (this was the cover story for a suspension), and a very risky 450 Splash by Gabriel off a horizontal ladder. In the end, Daniel Bryan emerged as something of an unexpected winner, which went down a treat with the hardcore Chicago fans. The show had kicked off with a bang.

Kelly Kelly vs. Brie Bella wasn't very notable to be honest, with Kelly winning in the usual Divas time allocation (i.e. not much time) to retain her Divas Title. Big Show vs. Mark Henry was a slow but watchable affair; Henry won by a clean pinfall after two World's Strongest Slams and, in the aftermath, he crushed Show's ankle to seemingly put him on the shelf too. Meanwhile, Vince McMahon and John Laurinaitis were having no luck in getting CM Punk to sign a new WWE contract prior to the main event; more on that later.

The card went into high gear again with the Raw MITB match, which involved Alberto Del Rio, The Miz, Rey Mysterio, Alex Riley, R-Truth, Evan Bourne, Jack Swagger and Kofi Kingston. This was very exciting, albeit a shade lower than the SmackDown bout, although it did feature the stunt of the night: a death-defying Air Bourne off a ringside ladder onto the participants. Miz appeared to be the third injury casualty of the night after a nasty fall but he valiantly returned to big cheers (why did a heel do this?). Actually, another awkward fall prevented Del Rio (who was definitely the favourite in this one) from winning after he unmasked Mysterio; an unexpected ladder collision saw ADR drop hazardously. Still, he rebounded by climbing right back up and securing the Raw briefcase to a positive reaction. Del Rio would successfully cash in just a month later at SummerSlam, whereas his blue brand counterpart Bryan, after hinting that he would wait until WrestleMania XXVIII to cash in, would end up doing it at TLC in December.

The penultimate match saw the continuation of a classic in-ring rivalry between Randy Orton and Christian. The action was as good as ever between these two here, although the bout was built not around the wrestling action, but on the stipulation that if Orton was disqualified, he would lose the World Heavyweight Championship. That he did, for that very reason, as Christian spat at Orton and the Viper, in retaliation, pummelled Christian to the point that the referee was waylaid and had to punish the champ. Christian was the new titleholder, although his celebration didn't last long: Orton continued destroying Captain Charisma, and the beating culminated in two RKO's by an animated Orton on the announcer's table. Incidentally, the crowd initially booed Orton here, but were on his side by the end for acting like an enraged lunatic rather than a goody two-shoes. Either way, another great entry in the best rivalry of 2011.

Then came the main event between CM Punk and John Cena for the WWE Championship. What a back-story this had: Punk's contract was expiring, for real, and Punk planned to leave WWE, for real. In the meantime, Punk earned a WWE Title shot at MITB, which was not only in his hometown of Chicago, but would be held the day that his contract expired. Even at this point, though, it was only a slightly intriguing boost to the top-liner.

But then on June 27, Punk cut his infamous "Pipe Bomb" promo which cut through most people that he referenced, and positioned him as a rebel who craved the idea of leaving WWE in a mess by walking out with the title. Storyline developments saw Vince suspend Punk, only to reinstate him at Cena's request, leading Vince to put John's job at stake too. The pre-MITB Raw saw a very engaging, realistic "contract negotiation" between Punk and McMahon, which Cena would eventually end by decking CM with a punch, and the segment closed with Punk tearing up the revised contract. That Punk was genuinely leaving and that the build-up intertwined with reality so much created a great deal of anticipation for this match, and the promised atmosphere only elevated it even more. But people wondered: would Punk really win and potentially leave WWE as the Champ?

Punk was greeted with an almighty roar and booming chants of "CM Punk!" by his hometown crowd. Cena received thunderous boos, although he did have some fans in attendance (including a Cena impersonator humorously sat on the front row). The Chicago crowd is often cited as one of the best, and this all-time great match atmosphere was a perfect reason why.

The match started slowly with lock-ups and chain wrestling, but it soon accelerated. There were plenty of big moves: a tope by Punk, a brutal knee to the jaw (which did connect) by the challenger and even a top rope hurricanrana from Punk. Cena retaliated with a very close call via the STF, and not one or even two Attitude Adjustments could polish Punk off. Meanwhile, the commentators reminded viewers of the gravity of the stipulation, and how damaging it could potentially be if Punk won and left with the title. All before a white-hot crowd and with over 30 minutes in duration, this was becoming an exceptional main event.

Following an admittedly weak GTS by CM to John, McMahon and Laurinaitis came out with the intention of screwing Punk Montreal-style if the opportunity provided itself. When Cena locked Punk back in the STF, Vince ordered "Big Johnny" to do just that, only for Cena to release the hold and thump Laurinaitis in the face, giving him a black eye in the process, as he told Vince that the match wouldn't end like that. Unfortunately for him, he re-entered the ring to receive another GTS by Punk, who pinned Cena to win the WWE Title to a huge ovation! Post-match, Vince ordered Del Rio to cash in MITB on CM, but Punk repelled the attempt with a kick and left through the crowd with the title in hand, sarcastically blowing a kiss to a stunned Vince as he seemingly left WWE as the Champ.

The next week in WWE was rather eventful: Vince announced a tournament to crown a new Champ and his intentions to fire Cena, only for a returning Triple H to unveil himself as COO and announce that Vince was "relieved of his duties" (which would later be quietly forgotten). Meanwhile, Punk crashed Comic Con with the title in his possession, and on Raw the following Monday, Rey Mysterio became the new Champ, but would later lose it to Cena, only for Punk to then return with the crown. I'll look at this situation when reviewing SummerSlam 2011, the following PPV, in the near future.

As for MITB 2011, though, that match was an unforgettable end to an incredible night of action. The two Ladder matches were both great, the World Title bout was gripping and the main event was outstanding for several reasons, and though some won't admit it, this was not a one-man show by Punk as Cena also delivered a strong performance. The wider storyline surrounding the main event and rabid crowd elevated the show as a whole into all-time great category. In hindsight, it didn't have the historical impact that some hoped as the groundbreaking Punk storyline quickly and disappointingly fizzled out, but as a one-off show in the context of the time period it was held in, Money In The Bank 2011 will always be remembered as one of the best WWE Pay-Per-View events of this decade.

Overall Rating: 9.5/10 - Classic