Showing posts with label Sheamus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sheamus. Show all posts

Friday, 7 October 2016

TLC 2015

Image Source: Amazon
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Running Time: 183 Minutes
Certificate: 15
Number Of Discs: 1
Studio: Fremantle Home Entertainment
Released: February 22 2016

(To read a full event review of WWE TLC 2015, click here.)

TLC 2015 occurred at a time when the WWE product was at a pretty low level. A combination of absences for top talent, poor casting in main event situations and generally dull writing meant that TLC was predicted to be a catastrophe of an event. Fortunately, though, the wrestlers delivered on the night, and the show closed with a memorable angle that temporarily reduced the fan hatred towards Roman Reigns, all of which makes this a pretty entertaining wrestling DVD to watch.

The opening three-way tag Ladder match between The New Day, The Lucha Dragons and The Usos widely surpasses expectations, and features an incredible Salida Del Sol by Kalisto which was arguably the most memorable spot of the entire year in WWE. The subsequent Ryback vs. Rusev bout suffers from an uninteresting plot whereby Ryback looks like an idiot for repeatedly falling for Lana's attempts to make out that The Big Guy had injured her. As for Alberto Del Rio vs. Jack Swagger: their Chairs match was as good as you could expect, and given the staleness of both men's characters at this point (even though ADR had only returned to WWE two months prior), it's a pleasant surprise, even if the "CM Punk!" chants put a dampener on it.

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Monday, 11 July 2016

WWE: Superstar Collection - Sheamus

Image Source: Amazon
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Running Time: 90 Minutes
Certificate: 12
Number Of Discs: 1
Studio: Fremantle Home Entertainment
Released: February 10 2014

Amongst the four performers who got a UK release for their Superstar Collection, Sheamus is the only one who hasn't had a separate DVD release. Therefore, his mini-compilation is more comprehensive than the others.

We get his first two WWE Title victories (against Cena in a Tables bout at TLC 2009 and against Cena, Edge & Orton at Fatal 4 Way 2010 in - yes- a four-way bout), as well as his King Of The Ring tournament-winning match against John Morrison from November 2010, a successful United States Title challenge opposite Daniel Bryan from March 2011, and the closing moments of his triumphant Royal Rumble 2012 performance. Match quality is pretty high across the board and each bout is a justifiable inclusion. Strangely, though, we don't get his World Title win over Bryan from WrestleMania XXVIII (which did only last 18 seconds, after all).

Since this is the only Sheamus DVD to date, this has the most appeal of any of the Superstar Collections which got a UK release. Of course, it helps if you're a fan of the Celtic Warrior, but even if you're not, this is a good recap of (most of) the key moments from Sheamus' early years, and a reminder that he was a genuinely important and appreciated part of WWE before his career was reduced to battling off chants of "You look stupid!"

Overall Rating: 7/10 - Respectable

Saturday, 5 March 2016

Survivor Series 2015

Image Source: Amazon
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Running Time: 182 Minutes
Certificate: 12
Number Of Discs: 1
Studio: Fremantle Home Entertainment
Released: January 25 2016

(To read a full event review of WWE Survivor Series 2015, click here.)

At the time when it was held, the 2015 edition of Survivor Series didn't exactly receive a lot of praise. But whilst it hardly stands out as an epic event upon the second viewing on DVD, it still has its moments, even if it doesn't really feel like a major supershow.

The first two matches are actually quite good: Roman Reigns vs. Alberto Del Rio is an underrated battle and a nice start to the PPV, whilst Dean Ambrose vs. Kevin Owens is better still with some really cool spots and high-impact moves. These are the semi-finals of the tournament to crown a new WWE Champion after Seth Rollins went down with injury; the final, between Reigns and Ambrose, would be the Survivors main event.

It's the second hour of the show which dragged the event down. Although it starts fairly well, the Survivor Series elimination match features some strange booking decisions and, by the end, the match just feels like a waste of time. The Divas Title match between Charlotte and Paige is better than I had remembered, but the disinterested crowd reduces one's enjoyment of the bout. Likewise, Dolph Ziggler vs. Tyler Breeze is a short but adequate match that suffers from a complete lack of heat, which no doubt played a part in Tyler's push being curtailed shortly afterwards.

The seemingly asleep Atlanta audience does seem to care about the next match, which celebrates 25 years of The Undertaker as he and Kane face The Wyatt Family. It's a decent bout, but it needed more high-quality action and standout moments if it was going to amount to anything memorable. That said, the double chokeslam to Braun Strowman through an announcer's table sticks out, as does the double sit-up by the Brothers of Destruction during Bray Wyatt's Spider Walk.

The WWE Title tournament was in itself a missed opportunity to create a bit of unpredictability and excitement, so many fans were hoping that Reigns vs. Ambrose would end the tournament with a bang, perhaps via a heel turn. Instead, the match is fine but it doesn't last very long (the crowd seems apathetic again which also doesn't help), and it ends with no heel turn, making the entire tournament exercise feel like filler. There are post-match capers whereby Sheamus cashes in Money In The Bank (I wasn't going to spoil it, but WWE spoiled this moment themselves on the reverse DVD packaging), but the presentation feels too similar to Randy Orton's Authority-influenced cash-in from SummerSlam 2013, and Sheamus' total lack of momentum before and even during this show resulted in a fair amount of disappointment with the finale to Survivor Series.

The only DVD extra is the pre-show Survivors elimination match, which is arguably better than the bout which was featured on the main card. I should point out that this was shown on the WWE Network, meaning that it is false advertising to call this an "exclusive" DVD extra. That being said, it's clear that DVDs are no longer a priority for WWE, so this probably won't be a problem for much longer.

So while it isn't totally forgettable, Survivor Series 2015 was a bit of a let-down (especially compared to the 2014 edition which featured Sting's historic WWE debut). There were some good matches, a historically noteworthy Undertaker match and a MITB cash-in, but the combination of lazy outcomes, strange booking decisions during the main elimination match, a lacklustre crowd, an injury-depleted roster and the seen-it-all-before feel to Sheamus' big moment resulted in a show which didn't exactly wow the "WWE Universe". Only die-hard collectors or fans of The Undertaker (since this was his 25th anniversary) are likely to enjoy this DVD; otherwise, barring a clearance sale, you may want to steer clear of this one.

Overall Rating: 6/10 - Reasonable

Monday, 14 December 2015

WWE TLC 2015

Image Source: F4W Online
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Genre: Wrestling
Produced By: WWE
Format: Pay-Per-View
Date: December 13 2015
Location: TD Garden, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Attendance: 14,903

Christmas can often be a time when high expectations result in an anti-climax, but it can also be a time when minimal hopes result in a pleasant surprise on the day. The latter applied to WWE's Xmas-time PPV event, TLC. On paper, the card wasn't the worst ever assembled, but the lack of star power in recent weeks (for a variety of reasons), a flat build-up and generally lacklustre writing from the WWE creative team all combined to almost make one feel like you were an idiot for actually wanting to see the show. Fortunately, the harshest critics were left with egg (or egg nog, since it's almost Crimbo?) on their faces, as the event delivered several worthwhile matches, a bonkers spot in the opening contest, and a closing scene which might have finally turned Roman Reigns into the next top babyface that WWE desperately wants him to be.

Unfortunately, WWE didn't help itself in the Kick-Off show, or rather with its presentation. After a month in which the company has been savagely buried by many, and with TLC almost annoying fans by its mere existence (fans at the NXT shows in the UK even booed TLC promo videos), you would think that WWE would want to really get fans back on its side from the get-go. Instead, for the second supercard in a row, the live feed cut out for the WWE Network at the beginning of the pre-show, and this time it was almost halfway through the hour-long preview programme before most fans (myself included) were able to see what was going on. That it happened once at Survivor Series was perhaps an accident; twice in a row suggests a major production mishap somewhere. This simply must be remedied, more than any other creative aspect of WWE TV; not only does it spoil one's enjoyment of said shows, but it reduces fan confidence that the feed will work, and with Royal Rumble up next and WrestleMania looming, the last thing WWE needs is an internal error to cause fans to opt out of watching supershows via the Network.

After that situation, WWE then gave us another source of annoyance. That the company booked Sasha Banks vs. Becky Lynch on the preview event didn't bother me; it ensured that the hometown Boston crowd got to see Sasha in action, thus hopefully preventing "We want Sasha!" chants during the PPV itself. That one of WWE's best matches of the year (at the May NXT Takeover) was only on the warm-up hour is questionable, but under the circumstances it's hardly worth rioting over. Fans don't realise that WWE is clearly building Sasha up, and saving her for a probable WrestleMania title shot, so in that respect the company is doing the right thing; slowly building up a contender to become champion on the biggest stage. Isn't that what we used to demand? This match was a pretty good one too, with Sasha winning via the Bank Statement after an admittedly weak interfering kick to Becky by Naomi. That Lynch lost by submission when a Divas Title shot might be approaching is also debatable, but regardless, the match was what it was.

Where this match approached the red zone in the "Annoy-ometer" was the pre-match promo for Team BAD. In recent weeks, WWE has tried to turn Team BAD into a female clone of The New Day, or at least an act incorporating comedy. Sadly, none of the three are particularly funny, they simply couldn't top the material that New Day provides, and Sasha is fine being an arrogant diva (no pun intended). And besides, isn't Tamina meant to be a dangerous force? (I was going to write "killer", but that would be too controversial for obvious reasons.) Where this really became infuriating, though, was the abysmal attempt at comedy before the bell with Team BAD singing a version of Twelve Days Of Christmas. I could understand WWE trying to ensure that fans booed Sasha, but this was dire. It was awful singing, and not in a funny way, but in, erm, an awful way. I couldn't even listen to the conclusion of this segment as it was so harmful to the ears. I hope that WWE realises that the trio are doomed to fail by being anything other than serious villains (they are called Team BAD, after all). Otherwise, fans will lose faith in the one main roster performer who genuinely could initiate a Divas Revolution. Also, their shrieks of "Unity!" are as annoying as hell. Please, WWE, stop this! And why was Lilian Garcia smiling when the heel group entered the ring, as if they were an act that we should cheer? And finally, why interrupt this match (and every Kick-Off match) with an extended commercial which could be shown over the 45 minutes of the preview show when there isn't a match going on?

Okay, rant over. After the underwhelming pre-show (which I didn't think was possible before the TLC preview event), we got to the PPV, and fortunately things began picking up. The New Day opened the card with another humorous promo. Some have noticed recently that, as entertaining as they are, the New Day act is ever-so-slightly starting to feel like it has peaked, and that overexposing the trio in recent times has threatened to reduce fan interest in them. This was a good segment, though, as the ND acted more heelish by ripping on the host city (cheap heat, yes, but at least it meant they were booed), and providing us with a suitably daft pose for a potential breakfast cereal box cover. Xavier Woods then went on commentary, whilst Kofi Kingston and Big E. duelled with the Lucha Dragons and the Usos.

Their Ladder match (a Triple Threat Tag Team affair) exceeded expectations. At first, it felt a bit same-old with regards to the spots and the structure of the match, but things escalated with such moments as a double Lucha Dragons moonsault onto New Day at ringside, followed by Jimmy and Jey Uso throwing ladders at their opponents and following that up with stereo dives. Xavier abandoned commentary momentarily to play the trombone during a ladder-assisted corner attack (in a rare comedy spot for a violent gimmick match), and Sin Cara hit a cool yet dangerous-looking senton over the ropes onto the Usos, who were under a ladder at the time. Kalisto was tipped off a ladder from underneath by Big E in another risky spot (but not Kalisto's most hair-raising stunt of the match; that came a bit later), and Kofi and Big E were taken out for the time being, leaving the two challenging teams to battle atop the ladders for the titles.

Then came the moment of the match, the night, the month and possibly even the year. Normally, going into these types of matches, I envision which signature moves or finishing moves could be incorporated into a high spot, but one I hadn't considered was the Sadina Del Sol by Kalisto, that being a backflip reverse neckbreaker. Here, Kalisto executed said move to Jimmy Uso ... off a ladder ... onto a ladder inserted between the standing ladder and the ropes ... and right through it! Kalisto must have gone 15 feet from where his feet were dangling whilst upside down to the canvas, and the impact on Jimmy's back and on Kalisto's legs (he went through the ladder in a sitting position) must have hurt a lot. The unpredictability of this moment, and the insane visual that it provided, earned it a huge ovation, and provided us with the most memorable ladder spot in ages, possibly since the days when Jeff Hardy was hurling himself off B&Q's favourite props. If WWE plans to push the Dragons, or at least Kalisto, this moment ensured that it will probably be a success.

Things still weren't over, as Jey Uso hit a splash to the floor on a ladder-covered Big E. Kalisto somehow recovered to climb a ladder again, but at this point Xavier distracted Kalisto by throwing his trombone at him, and Kofi then knocked the luchador off the ladder to open the door towards climbing up and retaining the titles for The New Day. A fantastic opener, this enhanced everyone involved, and rounded off a great year for The New Day. And Kalisto's big moment will be replayed on ladder and TLC highlight reels for years to come. I'm hoping for the Luchas to stay in the hunt and face New Day for the titles, perhaps at Royal Rumble, before a possible New Day-Usos title showdown around WrestleMania time.

Something had to follow that human stock car exhibition, and it came in the form of Ryback vs. Rusev. Uninspiring due to the general boredom of romance-based storylines, Ryback's lack of real momentum and fans being undecided whether they can accept the once-popular Lana as a heel again, this was the filler that we expected. It wasn't a bad match, as the two performers clearly grafted, but the fans weren't interested, and truthfully it would be hard to find many fans anywhere that would be. After Lana managed to once again make Ryback think that he had caused damage to her, Rusev capitalised and won via stoppage with the Accolade. Rusev and Lana work best together, but WWE needs to find a more interesting way of promoting their characters, because their storylines have been dull ever since Rusev's feud with John Cena ended. As for Ryback, it's hard to figure what WWE can do with a man once cast as the next Goldberg. A heel turn might be The Big Guy's only chance of being relevant in 2016.

Speaking of dull feuds (there's been quite a few lately in WWE), Alberto Del Rio's U.S. Title defence against Jack Swagger under Chairs rules had no real reason to exist, come showtime. With Zeb Colter joining forces with ADR, it made sense that Swagger wouldn't be impressed and would look to fight Del Rio. The first problem was that Swagger had been invisible for months, and now fans were suddenly expected to accept him as a title contender. Secondly, the ADR-Zeb alliance was simply boring and illogical, so while WWE did the right thing by separating them on the pre-TLC episode of Raw, it meant that there was virtually no reason for the two combatants to dislike each other. And whilst I didn't mind the Chairs stipulation, I don't think that there was enough animosity for such a potentially brutal stipulation to be added here.

Therefore, whilst this was a competent match, again fans weren't really into it. This felt like a match that you wanted them to get out of the way so that something which might be intriguing could then happen in the future. Both suffered some brutal blows (Swagger's back was badly marked up from the chairshots), and there were some innovative spots like a chair-assisted Patriot Lock, and Del Rio's match-winning Corner Stomp which drove Jack into a pile of chairs. This was an example of a match which needed a compelling story behind it; without that, the bout was never going to be a memorable one. I enjoyed it more than I expected, but it smacked of laziness by the WWE creative team for several reasons.

Of greater interest was the 8-man elimination tag Tables affair between The Wyatt Family and Team ECW, consisting of The Dudley Boyz and the recently-returned Tommy Dreamer and Rhyno (who had been on NXT for months, to be fair). Unlike other matches on the card, this promised nothing but violent weapon-based combat, and we definitely got that here, as tables and other weapons like garbage cans and canes were implemented. At one point, Tommy Dreamer even trapped Braun Strowman with a cheese grater to the balls (I was going to think of a clever pun, but in the absence of one, I thought I'd just call it as I saw it), which was something unexpected in the PG version of WWE.

And, yes, tables were broken. Too many, in fact, as more than one table broke unexpectedly with minimal impact. In terms of planned spots, Erick Rowan fell after a 3D, and Rhyno went out to a fairly weak kick by Luke Harper. Better was Harper's suicide dive through the ropes that put Dreamer through the wood. After a Doomsday Device to Harper by the Dudleyz (not through a table, incidentally), D-Von went out to Bray's Rock Bottom-like slam, leaving Bubba Ray alone with Bray, Braun and Harper. He put forth an admirable effort and, towards the end, lit up fans (quite literally) as he attempted to set a table on fire. But before he could, Strowman chokeslammed Bubba through the wood to claim the win for the Wyatts. We had seen a flaming table in PG WWE before at Extreme Rules 2014, so WWE perhaps could have found a way to make such a spot happen here to give us another genuine memorable moment. Or perhaps it would have seemed strange on a PPV sponsored by Toys R Us. Whatever the case, the Wyatts triumphed here, and realistically no other outcome was feasible; the Wyatts would have been permanently damaged had they lost on this occasion. The match was pretty good for what it was.

Match five pitted Kevin Owens against Dean Ambrose for the Intercontinental Title. Partly due to Owens' illness a few weeks back, this hadn't received a massive amount of hype, but fans were just excited to see these two go head-to-head again, following their Survivor Series collision. A pre-match promo by Owens attempted to turn fans against him (Kevin is so entertaining that he's a heel who most fans cheer; that's a recurring problem in WWE, I know), but against the popular Ambrose, fans were unlikely to provide the "wrong" reactions here. They started at a fast and furious pace, and the match actually felt a bit rushed, to be honest. I enjoyed this match, but I was expecting slightly more, as I was hoping they would build on their previous PPV encounter. Perhaps with more time on another night, they'll finally provide that truly great match that I was hoping for here.

Still, the match was far from a disappointment. An attempted Owens senton in the ring (which followed a successful senton at ringside) was followed by a KO German suplex. Ambrose avoided a Cannonball and hit Dirty Deeds, only for KO to save his IC Title by pitting two fingers on the ropes (not in a V-sign kind of way). It was a great heel moment, as it made Kevin look clever yet extremely fortunate, and he looked to capitalise with a Pop-Up Powerbomb. I expected this to be the finish, but instead Ambrose turned it into a hurricanrana and held Kevin's legs tight to get the three-count and win the Intercontinental Championship. Fans popped big-time, partly because they like Ambrose and partly because the result was unexpected. I was a bit sad to see Owens lose the title, but I expect rematches and a possible second title reign for Owens. At least it finally gives Ambrose a meaningful victory, and to be fair he could become a great Intercontinental Champion.

The penultimate battle was the Divas Title showdown between Charlotte and Paige, which has had a weird build-up. After the deeply personal nature of the Charlotte-Paige feud heading into Survivor Series, WWE suddenly changed course heading into TLC and began teasing a Charlotte heel turn. But with Paige still acting like a total villain, and since it's only a few weeks since Paige brought up Charlotte's dead brother as part of an insult, who were fans meant to cheer here?

I thought this match would see a gradual Charlotte heel turn, but instead the Divas Champion acted like a total heel from the bell. Ric Flair (Charlotte's father, if you didn't know) was at ringside, and the two Flairs heeled it up from Charlotte retreating to ringside to Charlotte even busting out a Flair Flop (which the WWE cameras annoyingly missed). Paige has been too nasty in recent months to cheer for here, but she was clearly working as a babyface with her mocking Flair struts. In the end, the challenger hit the Ram-Paige, but Slic Ric put Charlotte's foot under the ropes to cause the pinfall to be broken. Charlotte responded by driving Paige face-first into an exposed middle turnbuckle (a bit too weakly, unfortunately) to claim the win. Post-match, the Flairs tried to convince Becky Lynch that they are still to be trusted, and somehow Becky agreed as they apparently went to party (keep Becky away from 66-year-old Ric, if you know what I mean).

I was expecting Charlotte to slowly turn so that she would go all the way on Becky, but it looks like that has already happened. Who knows what Paige's status is now; presumably, she is a face again. I don't mind the attitude adjustments, but couldn't WWE have completed this storyline and then turned Charlotte against Becky in a following plotline? It was well-executed, and this was a better match that what we got at Survivor Series, but the presentation of the divas as a whole has been one  mishap after another.

Going into 2016, of the nine women at the centre of the Divas Revolution, all except Becky Lynch are now heels or possibly heels (the presentation of Team Bella is such a mess that it's impossible to work out what they're meant to be). Natalya is off TV again, and no other female performers are featured prominently on Raw or SmackDown at present. Good luck to WWE in trying to resolve this, because the eagerly-anticipated revamp of the Divas division is threatening to be a major flop. Fans want to enjoy the improved action involving the women, but unless it's presented logically and everyone's status is made clear, it will only result in more confusion and reduced interest. The only seemingly sure things at present are that Charlotte will next defend her Divas crown against Becky Lynch in some fashion, and that Sasha Banks is probably being saved for a title shot at WrestleMania 32. But even that could change.

The main event of TLC was, appropriately, a TLC (Tables, Ladders and Chairs, if you didn't know) clash between WWE World Heavyweight Champion Sheamus and Roman Reigns. Without so many top stars at the moment, this was the best that WWE could give us, but that wouldn't be a bad thing if the fans had been given a compelling storyline. Unfortunately, it was only mildly interesting at best, the League Of Nations faction have already suffered several losses as a group, and the final segment on Raw was drawn-out and featured some pathetic scripted dialogue for Reigns (who taunted Sheamus about having "tater tots", as if it were a heinous insult). Therefore, whilst the two big men can clearly provide a good match, and there was intrigue on the potential outcome (does Reigns finally become champ here, or does Sheamus retain while somehow protecting Roman), many hardcore fans saw this match as a symbol of a WWE in dire need of a creative shake-up.

Therefore, while the two main eventers worked hard and suffered some brutal forms of abuse at times, the live crowd wasn't in the least bit interested. They chanted for John Cena (a hometown hero, to be fair, but the "We Want Cena!" chant was hilariously ironic, even if it was mixed with "Cena Sucks!"), Seth Rollins, Daniel Bryan, NXT ... basically, everybody except the two men who were providing as good a match as they could have, under the circumstances. Sheamus, in particular, suffered some nasty-looking cuts (emphasised on his milky-white skin), and took a horrendous-looking throw in between two stacked tables which were surrounded by chairs. Reigns took a backdrop, a suplex slam and an Irish Curse through three separate tables. Both exchanged big chairshots, and generally put on a pretty compelling fight. But the crowd simply weren't interested.

It was sad to see because it wasn't the fault of the two combatants that John Cena has taken much-deserved time off; that Daniel Bryan, Seth Rollins, Randy Orton, Sting and Cesaro are injured; that Brock Lesnar and The Undertaker are strictly part-timers; that Kane and Big Show are who-knows-where right now; that NXT is WWE's hottest weekly TV show at present; and that WWE's writing of shows, promos, rivalries and everything else has been dismal over the last couple of months in regards to building up stars, creating compelling stories and making fans react accordingly to babyfaces and heels. In the midst of such a massive push, would Reigns really tell WWE writers that their promo material is awful? After waiting years for another title run, do you think Sheamus should turn the McMahons that he shouldn't be holding the title because of how badly WWE prepared him for it? Of course not.

I can definitely understand why fans are disillusioned with WWE right now. I am, too. Nevertheless, it shouldn't be taken out on Reigns and Sheamus, especially when they were busting a gut to at least give fans a worthy main event on the night. They should have been given a chance by the fans, rather than no chance. They were clearly trying to provide some cool spots. And the big bumps continued as Reigns hit a chair-assisted Superman Punch, and Reigns hit Sheamus with a Samoan Drop off the apron through a ladder straddled between the ring and the announcer's tables. Reigns then hit Sheamus with another SP, before Sheamus dragged Roman off the rungs. One more SP by Roman knocked Sheamus off a ladder through a table, opening the door for a Roman win. It should be noted that as it looked like Reigns might have won the match, fan noise did increase.

Interference from Rusev and Alberto Del Rio (where was King Barrett?) halted Roman's progress. Reigns drilled both with Superman Punches, but a Brogue Kick by Sheamus knocked Reigns out of the ring and, whilst Roman tried to recover, it was too late, as Sheamus retrieved the crown and retained the WWE Title. I enjoyed this match, or at least I tried to enjoy it. On mute, this would have been a very good main event. The crowd reactions couldn't help but damage the presentation of this bout. Fortunately, the night was not over. Those who were ignoring Roman were about to receive a surprise.

As the LON celebrated, one sensed that something else would happen (I was half-expecting a John Cena comeback), and something else did happen as Reigns Speared Rusev and Del Rio, who were holding Sheamus on their shoulders at the time in a cool visual. Reigns then began pounding all three with chairshots, in an attempt to show that Reigns had snapped due to all of the obstacles which had been continually thrown in front of him to stop him winning the WWE Title (the biggest one wasn't mentioned; that being, the response by fans towards Reigns throughout 2015). In the end, Triple H and Stephanie McMahon pleaded with Reigns to stop. But that only made Roman madder, as he surprisingly hit HHH with a Superman Punch!

Reigns then began pounding HHH with a chair (HHH hilariously jumped too high on the first chairshot to the back), and dragged him to ringside where he powerbombed him onto an announcer's table which didn't break. In response, and to an increasingly loud crowd response, Reigns ran across one table to elbow drop HHH through the other table. And as HHH was being assisted by referees and a virtually-weeping Stephanie, Roman ran back to ringside and Speared HHH. As he left, fans weren't booing or chanting for someone else; they were popping huge for Reigns. He was even greeted with a loud chant of "Thank you Roman!" Reigns acknowledged the crowd as he left, with an almost-villainous smirk, mouthing that he knew he would get fired for this.

Some wondered if this marked a Reigns heel turn, but in reality it was an extremely well-executed attack to finally get fans on Roman's side. Fans cheered Reigns when he was in The Shield and shortly after they broke up because he seemed like a believable tough guy who clearly had ability and big moves aplenty. Fans turned on him when he started becoming a John Cena clone, and he began reeling off pathetic scripted material by the creative team, and when WWE clearly made him out to be the Chosen One. By repeatedly making Reigns have to fight for the top spot, fans are less inclined to feel that Roman is shoved down their throats, but in this one post-match attack, Reigns reverted to the smash-mouth powerhouse from The Shield, who let his actions do the talking, who wasn't afraid of anyone, who is exciting to watch, who is his own man instead of a clone of somebody else, and who is a believable tough guy rather than a cartoonish superhero character.

In short, WWE might have finally achieved its primary goal of getting the fans to back Roman Reigns as the top babyface. This is the Reigns who fans want to see, not the Cena clone. If WWE manages Reigns correctly over the next few weeks, then it is feasible that he could win the Royal Rumble and fans would approve. He might then become WWE Champion for keeps at WrestleMania, and again fans might approve. This was a first-class example of how the booking of one's character dictates their response, and the best example in years of how WWE managed to completely train the audience into providing a particular reaction. At 3.50am UK time (or 10.50pm US time), Reigns was largely being ignored by Boston fans. Less than ten minutes later, he was getting the loudest cheers of the night by a mile. Well done, WWE, and well done to Roman Reigns, too, who is ending an eventful yet ultimately difficult year on a high with this showing.

It's clear from this attack that Reigns vs. HHH is planned, probably for WrestleMania. But after this attack, will that match be for the WWE Title, or will Reigns be diverted from the gold? One of two things will happen: Reigns will somehow avoid being fired (or overturn a potential firing), win the Rumble and become champion at Mania, either with him facing HHH beforehand, at Mania for the title or even at Mania with a view to earning a main event spot, like Daniel Bryan did at WM XXX. Or Reigns will not enter the title picture again until after a WM grudge match with HHH, leaving the door open for someone else to get a title shot.

The thing is, only Brock Lesnar stands out as a feasible title contender at Mania if it isn't Reigns, and could you really see Sheamus remaining WWE Champ until WrestleMania? With Dean Ambrose becoming IC Champ, I honestly cannot think of anyone else to challenge Sheamus at Royal Rumble or Fast Lane, unless WWE suddenly promotes Finn Balor from NXT. John Cena is a possibility, but he's likely to challenge Del Rio for the United States Title first; plus, if the rumours are true, Cena is facing Undertaker at WrestleMania, and we have seen Sheamus-Cena (and, for that matter, Lesnar-Cena) too many times already. The only other option would be if Daniel Bryan was somehow medically cleared, and he either became Champ at RR or won the Rumble in a surprise return, leading him to face Lesnar in a WWE Title match at WrestleMania. But the way things stand right now, Bryan might not even wrestle again in WWE. Who knows what will happen?

The good news is that WWE has six weeks to prepare for Royal Rumble, and the official beginning of the Road To WrestleMania, so there's plenty of time to make things happen. More good news came from TLC being a show that exceeded expectations with a few good matches and a couple of memorable moments. And the best news of all for WWE is that Roman Reigns might have finally achieved the goal of being accepted by WWE fans as the next top babyface in the company. Considering the woeful hype and the almost-deterrent messages beforehand by fans about whether to watch the show, TLC 2015 has to be considered a success. After a rocky time on-screen and off, this will hopefully be the catalyst for a turnaround in WWE. I'll give the show a higher rating than usual, simply for succeeding where virtually everyone had predicted failure.

Overall Rating: 7.5/10 - Good

Monday, 23 November 2015

WWE Survivor Series 2015

Image Source: Ticketmaster
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Genre: Wrestling
Produced By: WWE
Format: Pay-Per-View
Date: November 22 2015
Location: Philips Arena, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Attendance: 14,481

The 29th annual edition of the Survivor Series had two main talking points heading into the show: the tournament for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship (which in itself brought about other potential discussion topics, as I will explain), and the show marking the 25th anniversary of The Undertaker's debut. In the end, neither scenario brought about a big surprise, although a show-closing swerve did provide Survivor Series with a memorable if slightly familiar ending.

That being said, beforehand, there was genuine concern about a potential attack on the show by extremists, in light of recent world events. Whether it be due to tightened security or such chatter being hearsay, the event fortunately did not suffer from such problems; as it often has, WWE stood tall and went on with the show despite the fear that the rumours had caused. A perfect example of this was Lilian Garcia opening Survivor Series with a powerful rendition of The Star-Spangled Banner.

Still, fans got a minor scare when the WWE Network feed went down right as the live Kick-Off show began. On another occasion, this would be put down to a connectivity fault, but given the situation preceding the show, many were wondering if there was a connection (no pun intended). Fortunately, whatever the problem was, it had been fixed within 10 minutes, and the feed remained live for the rest of the night.

As for the Kick-off Show itself: we unexpectedly got a bonus Survivor Series elimination match, which just as unexpectedly saw the return of Goldust! He teamed with Neville, The Dudley Boyz and Titus O'Neil (where was Darren Young?) against Stardust, The Ascension, Bo Dallas and The Miz under traditional SS rules (you get eliminated by pinfall, submission, countout or disqualification, and the match continues until a full team has been vanquished). Viktor of The Ascension went out early (and quite effortlessly) to a basic Goldust slam, followed by Miz pinning Neville (which had to be a comedown to the Englishman, since on paper he was one win off performing at this PPV in the WWE Title tournament). But Miz, a former WWE Champ himself, was pinned immediately by Goldust (who recently celebrated an anniversary of his own, by the way; his character first entered the WWF/WWE just over 20 years ago).

It felt weird watching commercial breaks during a Survivor Series elimination match which was taking place at Survivor Series (well, kind of), but that's the Kick-Off Show for you; one or two breaks during the 40-45 minutes of talking, and then two during the bonus match. Anyway, Bubba Ray Dudley pinned Konnor, and Bo Dallas fell to the Clash Of The Titus, leaving Stardust against four men. The former Cody Rhodes tried to run off, but was thrown back into the ring to taste a match-winning 3D. So, everyone except Neville survived (couldn't Titus have been eliminated instead of Neville, since the Newcastle-born high-flyer is a far more exciting performer?), and Goldust returned to potentially re-ignite his feud with Stardust. If they do, I really hope that Dusty Rhodes is only mentioned in passing and not made a part of the storyline, which can be extremely distasteful if done wrongly (as I will note later on). Overall, though, a fun match for the Kick-Off Show. One last observation: what happened to The Dudleyz' comeback run? If things keep going in this direction, they'll be long gone from WWE by this time next year.

The first official match of the night was one of the semi-finals in the WWE Title tournament between Roman Reigns and Alberto Del Rio. Before I discuss the match, I'll talk about the tournament. Seth Rollins had been champion since WrestleMania and was scheduled to defend it here against Roman Reigns. But an injury meant that he will be out of action for 6-9 months, necessitating a vacating of the title. WWE announced a tournament to be held over multiple weeks, culminating in a new champion being crowned at Survivor Series. Many weren't happy that the tournament felt like a bit of a non-event, due to the lack of intrigue surrounding those involved and potential outcomes.

While that is undoubtedly true, the current WWE roster is rather thin. Rollins is injured of course, but Randy Orton also has a long-term injury. Daniel Bryan still isn't back from injury (and might never be, at least in WWE). John Cena is on his first requested leave of absence since his WWE debut in 2002, so the guy deserves to remain on vacation. Brock Lesnar is between appearances, and would be too dominant for his inclusion to result in anything other than a title victory. Besides, he is more likely to enter the WWE Title picture in early 2016 (which I will discuss later on). The Undertaker and Kane and The Wyatt Family had their own storyline going on; Bray Wyatt could have been entered and been denied by the Brothers Of Destruction, I suppose, but I'm not that bothered that Bray wasn't included since he had a valid reason for not being involved. The Rock is (presumably) currently unavailable. Triple H entering would only have worked had he entered the final match only, because why would HHH go through four opponents to get a title opportunity when he runs the company?  Sting is apparently still injured, with question marks surrounding whether he will ever wrestle again at this stage. And even Rusev is on the sidelines, with Cesaro reportedly about to join him on the shelf.

Therefore, given all of these absences, could you realistically have expected a better field of 16 than what WWE chose? (Although, not to hate on Titus, but his inclusion baffled me). And whilst most tournament matches on the Raw in Manchester were run-of-the-mill (Cesaro-Sheamus being the exception), we got a big upset on SmackDown when Kalisto pinned Ryback (even if it achieved nothing with Kalisto losing quickly to Del Rio in the next round), and every quarter-final match besides ADR-Kalisto was either really good or great. Sure, WWE could have made the storyline surrounding the semi-finals more interesting, and comparisons were unavoidable to a similar tournament for the then-WWF Title at Survivor Series 1998. But the Attitude Era is long gone, and we're talking about 2015 WWE rather than 1998 WWF here. All things considered, whilst it definitely could have had more plot twists, realistically you couldn't have expected more in terms of the personnel than what we got from this tournament. And the brackets did promise some pretty good matches at the PPV, regardless of the outcomes.

Okay, I've done enough talking; back to the action. Reigns-Del Rio was exactly what was expected; a back-and-forth match with Reigns relying on power and big moves, and ADR catching Reigns off-guard with his strikes and weakening Reigns' arms with the Cross Armbreaker. I won't go move-for-move here because I've gabbed enough already, so suffice it to say that Reigns avoided the turnbuckle stomp and Speared Del Rio for the win. Reigns' victory was 99.9% expected, so all I can say is that at least this was an exciting opener. Del Rio's lack of a real character at present, besides talking about Mex-America (what happened to the fancy cars and the personal ring announcer) overshadows the fact that he nearly always provides a good match. Hopefully WWE will do something to make ADR more interesting, because his strong work ethic is being tarnished by his dull-as-ditchwater persona (or lack thereof). Reigns received a lot of cheers at this point, by the way.

Match two was slightly less predictable, as the other semi-final pitted Dean Ambrose against Kevin Owens. The two were teasing a feud before the tournament began; what a coincidence that they met in the semi-final, eh? Regardless, whilst a Reigns vs. Ambrose final seemed obvious, Owens' all-round entertainment package meant that WWE could have decided to swerve the audience and slot KO into the final. However, that didn't transpire; Ambrose did indeed pick up the win, following a great match filled with slick counters and high-impact moves, such as Owens' modified suplex off the top rope, and the sequence which saw Dean leap over Kevin's shoulders to avoid a Pop-Up Powerbomb, and the subsequent interlocking of arms that eventually resulted in Dean planting KO with Dirty Deeds for the pin, was a pretty cool thing to watch. Owens is so undeniably fun to watch that many fans were backing him during the match, but that didn't stop Ambrose receiving an overwhelmingly positive response after triumphing here. The only downside was that the match seemed to end just as it was getting really good; another 5-10 minutes, and we might have had a Match Of The Year contender; the action was that good. Still, there's always the possibility of a rematch (which is likely, as I will once again explain later on). Reigns vs. Ambrose was set for the final, which most predicted when they first saw the brackets two weeks ago. Nevertheless, there was still intrigue as to who would win, and under what circumstances. I shall explain what happened - yes! - later on.

Up next was a Survivor Series elimination match, with the participants strangely unannounced beforehand. This would have worked if WWE had some surprise entrants involved, but alas no, that wasn't the case. We did get The New Day, though, who were as much of a guilty pleasure to watch as ever, alongside King Barrett and Sheamus. They battled Ryback, The Usos and The Lucha Dragons in a peculiar elimination match, more for events later on in the night than those which happened during the match.

Besides Xavier Woods' daft new hairstyle and his usual trombone antics (which led to a humorous visual of Barrett getting jiggy with The New Day), there wasn't much going on until a huge dive by all babyface participants except Ryback to the floor, who then followed suit with one of his own. This deservedly got a big pop, and was the highlight of a pedestrian match which the fans didn't seem greatly interested in. Barrett was ousted first from a Sin Cara senton; the King must be wondering what part of the show he will pinball onto next following this. The man who entered WrestleMania as Intercontinental Champion, won King Of The Ring and got WWE mass publicity after taking a slap from Wayne Rooney at the Manchester episode of Raw suffers frequent career plunges, with another happening here. Barrett's best option is to escape WWE TV for a while, and return when WWE is interested in featuring him in a prolonged, career-making scenario. As it is, it feels like Barrett will never achieve anything big in WWE again, which is a shame for a good all-around performer with an understated sense of humour.

Jimmy Uso was pinned surprisingly cleanly by Xavier Woods, and after a risky Spear by Big E through the ropes to take Cara to the floor, he was pinned by Sheamus following a Brogue Kick. A big splash from Jey Uso pinned Big E to the horror of the New Day, who bizarrely decided at this point to leave the match. The good thing about SS matches is that you can present some DQs and countouts without causing mass upset, since they only slightly affect the match outcome. Here, it had a big effect from a storyline standpoint, as Sheamus was left all alone with Ryback, Kalisto and Jey Uso. I thought Sheamus would hit a clean sweep to revive his own flagging fortunes, or at least narrow it down to one-on-one. He did enter SS with the Money In The Bank briefcase, after all. But instead, he fell quite easily to Ryback's Shell Shocked, losing the match for his team. Match over, just like that. All in all, this was fun to watch, but the booking was strange at best and lazy at worst. And considering what Sheamus would do before the show ended, it raises some questions which WWE would struggle to answer.

Speaking of which ... Charlotte defend the Divas Title against Paige in a match, and a feud, which has now been completely overshadowed by the incident which closed the preceding Raw. I'll touch on it in a moment, but I'll simply say that this was a fairly good effort, and a lengthy match, but one which received minimal crowd noise, probably due to the aforementioned Raw angle. Charlotte Speared Paige off the crowd barrier (another Spear?), in a dangerous-looking (and seemingly-botched) spot, and "Baby Flair" shortly thereafter made Paige submit to the Figure-8. After that result, Paige can't really claim a rematch, so the rivalry appears to have ended. The effort was there, but it just felt inconsequential. And yet this was hyped up strongly by WWE, was built off a two-month storyline whereby a jealous Paige turned on Charlotte and Becky Lynch, and was actually something of a dream match for fans only a few months ago. Granted, WWE presents women differently than its NXT show does, but still ... why did this match feel like it didn't matter?

The answer, of course, was because of what happened on Raw. WWE chose to close the final Raw before Survivor Series with a contract signing between the two ladies. A questionable decision, considering the tournament which was in progress and the fact that the "Divas Revolution" hasn't quite exploded yet (it seemed to be an attempt to cash in on Ronda Rousey shockingly losing her first fight in UFC); but regardless, all was going fairly well. Charlotte had been booed throughout the UK tour while Paige was cheered (she is English, by the way, which could explain things), and the contract signing was in North Carolina, a.k.a. Flair Country. On Raw, things were going swimmingly, all things considered, until ...

Charlotte noted how her whole career was dedicated to her late brother Reid, and how Paige helped Charlotte through Reid's death in 2013. In response, though, a scripted remark by Paige was made for her to taunt Charlotte about this, noting how she doesn't have fight, and her deceased brother didn't either. The crowd response was shock via being offended rather than shock via "I want to see Charlotte beat Paige up". The resultant brawl was tarnished, and the PPV match suffered here too. Whilst bringing up deaths as heel heat was never truly acceptable in the past, this felt really, really low. Regardless of your opinion about WWE bringing up Eddie Guerrero and Paul Bearer in storylines, at least they were, to an uneducated fan, WWE characters. Reid Flair never was; this was the untimely death of a person who had never wrestled for WWE. For WWE to bring this up to make Paige look like a villain was truly terrible. As I mentioned earlier, it's not the Attitude Era anymore. The world has changed. For example, back then, the WWF presented some storylines with racial undertones, and would do so again in future. In 2015, Hulk Hogan was fired by WWE for racist comments.

The same applies in this scenario. Fans want to enjoy WWE, relax when watching the show, feel good when watching the show. Bringing up someone's death in this manner achieves none of that, and leaves one feeling cold. Especially since Charlotte's mother Elizabeth and her dad, who of course is Ric Flair, apparently weren't told about the remark beforehand. Ric's subsequent comments on his podcast, which strongly implied that he was upset but didn't want to say anything that would affect Charlotte's career, and hinting that she couldn't refuse to agree to these comments because she was relatively new to WWE, has actually led to WWE preventing its talent from appearing on Ric's podcast in the near future, as alarming as it might read. Worse still are the rumours that WWE, in an attempt to absolve itself of blame for the remark, tried to make the outside world believe that it was Charlotte's idea, as ridiculous as that sounds (Charlotte was in tears in the ring before the remark, probably because she knew what was coming).

In the end, WWE didn't even use the remark in the pre-match video here, and besides a vague reference to it by Michael Cole, there was no further mention of it here. It's wrong to use one's death in this fashion, anyway, but this time it appears that it truly backfired. WWE looks downright shady for thinking that this was appropriate, and has been heavily criticised as a result. Not for nothing, the comment was the main talking point by fans after the pre-PPV Raw, which is unwanted on several levels. Hopefully, the backlash will finally convince WWE to not refer to or exploit death in the future. I don't agree with those who run WWE down as a company or make Vince McMahon out to be the devil, but he unquestionable has a habit (either deliberately or otherwise) of green-lighting some content guaranteed to offend. It has to be hoped that this coal-black trend has now ended as a result of the fallout to this saga.

Okay, this has been a text-heavy review, but there's been a lot to discuss. For that reason, I'll only quickly state here that in match number five, former NXT standout Tyler Breeze pinned Dolph Ziggler, fairly easily actually. This looks to be the beginning of what should be an enjoyable feud, with this match being good but feeling more like a preview to bigger things on the horizon. If not, then Ziggler's star is plummeting rapidly. The crowd response was almost non-existent here; it felt like the crowd was in attendance for the tournament and the Undertaker match, and nothing else. Oh, and beforehand, Reigns and Ambrose had a chat backstage with both agreeing to put their friendship aside later on and simply fight for the title.

Fortunately, a fairly drab hour or so of action was followed by the penultimate match, which pitted The Undertaker and Kane against The Wyatt Family. The storyline was a bit confusing, and the beatdown of the Wyatts to close the Manchester Raw made the match feel pointless, since that destruction (no pun intended) was so one-sided. In reality, it all existed to create a match to mark the 25th anniversary of The Undertaker's WWF/WWE debut, back at Survivor Series 1990. Amazingly, it was to the exact date; this show was on November 22 2015, and SS 1990 was on November 22 1990. (Okay, so Taker had some matches taped under the ironic name Kane The Undertaker prior to SS '90 which were broadcast after the PPV, but that's all kept hush-hush.)

The Wyatts usually have the best entrance of the night, but not on this night. Kane did ... no, I'm joking. Kane came out first, followed by Taker, whose arrival included rising flames, two burning Undertaker symbols from the Ministry era, and a huge casket was dropped in front of the big screen, which when opened revealed a screen which showed photographs of Undertaker throughout his career, from his debut onto the purple glove days, into the Attitude Era, onto the American Bad Ass phase (which is sometimes ignored by WWE), and right to the present day. The casket screen was simple but really effective, and the entrance as a whole gave me goosebumps to watch, and was actually a bit emotional. For those fans who have followed Undertaker's career for the entire 25 years, or even those who have watched him since the Attitude Era, it felt like a huge moment, and was actually probably the highlight of the show to me. WWE doesn't normally mark these occasions for specific performers (see Survivor Series 2010, which didn't mark the 20th anniversary of Taker, who was admittedly injured at the time), but nobody deserved such a tribute more than Undertaker, who should be far higher than he is on people's lists for the greatest WWE performer of all-time.

Onto the match: the Brothers Of Destruction double-chokeslammed Erick Rowan beforehand, leaving Bray and Luke Harper to compete (Wyatt's partner would only be picked on the night), with Braun Strowman unexpectedly remaining a spectator. Taker started strong, with Kane taking over before being recklessly thrown over an announcer's table by Strowman. Kane remained on the defensive for some time before making the inevitable hot tag to Taker, who turned the match in his team's favour. A double chokeslam through an announcer's table took out Strowman, and after a cool visual where Harper and a Spider Walking Wyatt were met by simultaenous sit-ups from Taker and Kane, two chokeslams to Wyatt and Harper led to Undertaker Tombstoning and pinning Harper. Fans gave Taker the deserved huge reaction throughout this match presentation, which served its purpose as a straightforward (by Undertaker standards) to mark his legendary quarter-century WWE run.

Some were angry that the Wyatts lost, but let's face it; the writing was on the wall after Raw in Manchester, and Taker might only have one or two matches left in him. There'll be plenty of chances to revive the Wyatts' fortunes in the future. Whether WWE does is another matter, of course.

So we come to the main event: Reigns vs. Ambrose, in the final of the WWE Title tournament. (By the way, these two main eventing for a title vacated by Rollins underlines the impact that The Shield had on WWE; they too debuted at Survivor Series back in 2012). The main question going into this (besides the obvious) was whether either man would turn heel and align with The Authority. Some thought that Reigns would sell out and give into the occasional fan resentment that he suffers; others believed such a scenario would make Ambrose the new top heel in WWE. Either way, you knew that WWE wouldn't just give us a straight-up match; something had to go down which would be unexpected.

The match itself started as a slugfest, and quickly built up into a game of one ups-manship involving fairly big moves and some finishers. It felt very rushed, and I noticed that the match ended with around 20 minutes of the three-hour timeslot still available. The action was good, but it felt like around 5-10 minutes had been removed from it; with the added time, this match would have been a lot better. A tournament can do that to shows, and to be fair both men had wrestled around 30 minutes each after this bout ended. It's worth noting that Reigns was booed more heavily here, and that the crowd could have still been louder during the match's key moments.

The main one being a Spear by Reigns which put Ambrose away. Three years after debuting at Survivor Series 2012, and two years after a dominant display in a 2013 SS elimination match, Roman Reigns was the WWE World Heavyweight Champion, capping off an eventful yet difficult year. The crowd response was ... okay. A good number of fans cheered, but it wasn't anything close to a unanimous roar to celebrate the company's next top star. Ambrose endorsed Reigns afterwards, which killed off any ideas that a heel turn was going to happen (I thought that Dean would turn, judging by his suspect facials and mannerisms throughout the show). Fireworks went off and confetti poured to mark the occasion, but one still had that feeling of "Surely, something else is going to happen here?" It wouldn't have been a horrible end by any means, but given the anticlimactic feel to the presentation of the tournament, finishing on this note would have made fans feel like the show was a let-down.

Then, Triple H's music hit, and you knew that there really was going to be some post-match fracas. HHH came down supposedly to endorse Reigns, despite Roman refusing his offer to become The Authority's golden boy a few weeks ago. Reigns wasn't having it, and surprisingly Speared HHH to his loudest pop of the night. But he turned around to be Brogue Kicked by Sheamus, who was suddenly in the ring to cash in Money In The Bank! After an awkward delay whilst Lilian Garcia announced what was happening, the bell rang and Sheamus pinned Roman, but Reigns kicked out; it felt like Sheamus was going to fail (which wouldn't have been a shock, to be honest). Reigns then launched himself for a Spear, only to taste a second Brogue Kick. Sheamus pinned Roman again and, this time, the referee counted three, making Sheamus the new WWE World Heavyweight Champion! Sheamus shook Triple H's hand afterwards, while Roman was left with tears in his eyes pondering the situation as the show concluded.

A Sheamus cash-in wasn't a massive surprise, but it was unexpected that he would actually win the top title after the demeaning booking of him ever since he won the briefcase back in June. For that reason, some were disgruntled, but we all know that Sheamus won't hold the title for very long, and that Reigns will either beat Sheamus for the gold, or he will win it in early 2016; it might not even be Sheamus who he takes the title from. And if Ambrose had won and received this treatment, fans would have near-rioted. I think Sheamus should have cashed in during the match like Seth Rollins did at WM 31 so that Reigns' first title win wouldn't have ended so quick, but it's clear that Roman will get it back. And despite what fans may think, Roman has done enough in his three years of WWE service to merit a long reign, at least by modern standards. This booking is designed to give Reigns one more mountain to climb to earn his goal, by which point fans shouldn't resent Roman's success. He will have proven himself by then, surely?

Looking ahead, I expect a Sheamus-Reigns TLC showdown for the top title. Ambrose will probably face Kevin Owens for the IC Title, judging by their interaction before and after SS. WWE appeared to be planning a Del Rio-Jack Swagger feud before SS, but rumour has it that John Cena will return at TLC and reclaim his U.S. Title. Elsewhere, Charlotte may defend her Divas Title against Sasha Banks (the "We want Sasha" chants on a weekly basis are impossible to ignore), the New Day will presumably defend their Tag Titles against The Usos; and we may get Wyatt vs. Kane so that Bray can at least begin to rebuild his image.

Since TLC is the last show before WrestleMania Season begins, it's worth making some early predictions for the Royal Rumble-to-WrestleMania period. The only feasible winners for the Rumble at this point are either Reigns or Lesnar (WWE won't give Daniel Bryan a Rumble win if they weren't prepared to do it in 2015). Whichever one of those two doesn't win the Rumble will probably defend the title at WrestleMania, winning it from Sheamus at some point in the next few months. Besides, who else can Lesnar face at Mania? Feuds with Cena, Undertaker and HHH have been done to death; Rock is apparently unavailable for the show due to a film production; Rollins and Orton are injured; and the likes of Ambrose, Owens and Wyatt would need much stronger booking to make them a threat to The Beast Incarnate. Unless WWE somehow brings back Kurt Angle or Batista, or miraculously convinces Stone Cold Steve Austin to come out of retirement, Lesnar will surely be facing Reigns at WrestleMania, probably for the title.

Elsewhere, The Undertaker may or may not retire at WrestleMania, with rumoured opponents to be one of John Cena, Sting or Braun Strowman. Sting would be the dream opponent, but who knows if Sting will wrestle again? (I'm predicting the Stinger to headline the 2016 Hall Of Fame class, though) If that doesn't happen (because of WWE's annoying refusal to make that match happen), Taker vs. Cena is the best option and, if it does mark Taker's finale, it will be a big match to go out on. I really hope that Taker doesn't fight Strowman; it has the potential to spoil the supposedly-biggest WrestleMania of all-time. Whatever the case, I hope that Taker doesn't lose, to ensure that Brock Lesnar remains the only "1" who ever beat Undertaker at WrestleMania.

Elsewhere, the card is a mystery. Triple H needs a new opponent with Rock and Rollins unavailable; perhaps WWE might persuade Batista to return and have his last match here against HHH (The Animal has stated that such a scenario would be his preferred WWE swansong). Besides that, the show at this point is totally unpredictable. Injuries, movies and scandals (in Hogan's case) have disrupted almost every WrestleMania-related scenario, a major problem since WWE was intending to make WM 32 the biggest to date. Hopefully, WWE will be able to put together a show befitting the occasion, because as things stand right now, WrestleMania 32 looks even promising than WM 31 did beforehand (which was unimaginable a year ago; let's not forget, though, that WM 31 ended up being much better than expected).

As for Survivor Series 2015? It wasn't great, to be honest. The tournament matches were all good, with Ambrose-Owens being the stand-out, but most episodes of Raw have at least one match which is better than what we got here. Undertaker's bout was a fitting way to mark his 25th anniversary, but it was definitely more spectacle than match. The other matches didn't do much for me, to be honest. Even the shock ending had a familiar ring to it; Randy Orton became WWE Champ under similar circumstances at SummerSlam 2013, and the MITB cash-in has become more expected than unexpected. (Incidentally, some say that WWE should scrap MITB after this latest instance; to that, I say that WWE simply needs to do a better job of building up stars who merit the briefcase.) It wasn't a garbage show, but the absence of Cena, Rollins, Lesnar, Orton and Cesaro was definitely felt here. WWE made the most of a bad situation, given Seth's injury, but Survivor Series ended up being one of the least spectacular shows of the year. Worth watching for Undertaker's anniversary shenanigans and some moments from the tournament, but nothing else.

Overall Rating: 6.5/10 - Okay