Showing posts with label The Shield. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Shield. Show all posts

Monday, 26 September 2016

WWE Best Pay-Per-View Matches 2014

Image Source: Amazon
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Running Time: 528 Minutes
Certificate: 15
Number Of Discs: 3
Studio: Fremantle Home Entertainment
Released: January 12 2015

The year 2014 was a turbulent one for WWE. On one hand, we had the rise of Daniel Bryan to championship glory at WrestleMania XXX, the continued ascension of The Shield members before and after their break-up, the re-establishment of Brock Lesnar an absolute monster, and the debut of Sting at Survivor Series. On the other hand, we had the initial outrage at Daniel Bryan's non-entry in the Royal Rumble match, CM Punk walking out the following day, the end of The Undertaker's Streak at WrestleMania XXX and other moments of frustration (such as the repeated delaying of the WWE Network launch in the United Kingdom). If nothing else, it was a very memorable year, and many of the year's biggest memories came on Pay-Per-View.

As we have seen previously, this DVD set brings us plenty of the best or most memorable PPV matches of the year. Like with previous sets, Survivor Series and TLC aren't touched, and one or two omissions are surprising, as I will explain. This set also has a thrown-together feel to it by the generic artwork and the lack of a host. However, because it wasn't released on Blu-ray (and wasn't released in the United States at all, strangely), the running time is longer, giving us more action and basically more bang for our buck. (Okay, "bucks" are American currency and wouldn't apply since it wasn't on sale in the US, but the expression still works, dammit!).

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Sunday, 29 May 2016

WWE Elimination Chamber 2014

Image Source: Sportskeeda
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Genre: Wrestling
Produced By: WWE
Format: Pay-Per-View
Date: February 23 2014
Location: Target Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Attendance: 14,101

The Road To WrestleMania XXX was well and truly in effect by the time that Elimination Chamber rolled around, but where that path will lead to is anybody's guess. Not least due to the absence of CM Punk, who walked out of WWE the day after Royal Rumble, with people none the wiser as to why he did so, and with Punk still yet to return. Whilst WWE is dealing with this crisis off-screen, on-screen it has another big problem as fans have largely greeted Batista's comeback and Royal Rumble victory with disdain, whilst making it clear that contrary to WWE's wishes, they want Daniel Bryan and not Batista to main event WrestleMania XXX.

Elimination Chamber represented a chance for WWE to try and create some buzz for Mania outside of these issues, along with perhaps finding a remedy to the situation of the planned WM main event being unwanted by most. The card itself had two standout matches on paper: the Elimination Chamber match itself for the WWE Title, and a six-man tag pitting The Shield against The Wyatt Family. Would these or any other matches create interest for the April 6 mega-show?

After a pre-show match which saw The Brotherhood combo of Cody Rhodes and Goldust triumph over RybAxel, Elimination Chamber officially kicked off with Big E defending the Intercontinental Title against Jack Swagger, who won a pretty good Fatal Four Way match on a recent episode of SmackDown to earn this opportunity. Big E, incidentally, has had his name shortened; no longer is his last name "Langston". Why WWE has made this decision, I do not know. It makes even less sense that Cesaro has now lost his first name, meaning that he no longer answers to Antonio, again for unknown reasons.

This IC Title scrap was rather enjoyable. It had the potential to be a typical WWE big man match with two competent efforts but nothing distinguishing it from other matches on the card, but this encounter had some nice exchanges and surprisingly smooth reversals and near-falls. The highlights were the return of Big E's quite insane spear through the ropes to the floor, and some close calls for Swagger with the Patriot Lock submission hold. Big E wrapped this one up with the Big Ending, denying Zeb Colter his first of two chances to manage a titleholder following this card (and Cesaro's chances of winning the main event were very slim). This was definitely better than expected, and so it opened Elimination Chamber on a bit of a high.

Before the WWE Tag Team Title match, we had the first of what would be several interruptions by Bad News Barrett on a variety of heat-building topics, and we had the official on-air confirmation of Hulk Hogan's return to WWE, with him making his proper comeback on Raw the following night. Not seen in a WWE ring since 2007, Hogan's reappearance will create a good buzz for WrestleMania XXX, even if his back injury makes it unlikely that the Hulkster will actually have a match on April 6.

The Usos have had a steady push over the last eight months, which combined with the probable short-term championship run for multitime Tag Team Champions (of the worrrrrrrrld!) The New Age Outlaws suggested to me that a title change was on the cards here. That Jimmy and Jey Uso have become more popular and one of the most reliable doubles acts in WWE went unnoticed by this crowd, who loudly chanted for CM Punk throughout and later on the show as well. Expect that to become an ongoing thing, regardless of who was in the wrong with the Punk situation.

As noted, I thought that this would be The Usos' night, but instead The Outlaws picked up the surprise win (which seemed to deflate the Minneapolis crowd, when they weren't chanting for CM Punk anyway) when Billy Gunn rolled up Jimmy Uso for the pinfall win. Although this wasn't the big moment when The Usos finally won their first WWE Tag Team Titles since debuting back in 2010 (and having improved immensely since then), I still expect Jimmy and Jey to seize the doubles crowns soon from The Outlaws, perhaps at WrestleMania XXX.

Next up, we had Darren Young vs. Titus O'Neil. WWE made the odd decision to split up the Prime Time Players combo shortly after Royal Rumble, with O'Neil going heel and launching a fairly violent attack on DYoung. This was their grudge match and, whilst it was nice that WWE allowed such a feud to climax on a supershow, it was clear from the crowd responses that there wasn't enough oomph to this situation for fans to particularly care. It didn't help that the PTP seemed to have more to achieve as a team, having only turned babyface over the summer and with them having only one major televised title opportunity.

More surprising still was the outcome: Darren Young, as the wronged babyface, was presumed to get retribution on this show, but instead after some run-of-the-mill action, it was Titus who won the match by pinfall after hitting the Clash Of The Titus. O'Neil appears to be getting primed for a decent push as a heel, for obvious reasons (he's tall and muscular, which is enough for Vince McMahon to take a punt on someone in many instances). Whether it will succeed or not is anybody's guess; at this point, given O'Neil's ability level, I would predict that it probably will not work out. Certainly not for Young, who is now cast adrift as a low-card babyface, and one who lost to the former partner who betrayed him.

The most anticipated match on the show was the first proper meeting of The Shield and The Wyatt Family, and the audience was electric before a blow had been thrown as the two squads stood in a pre-match face-off. They erupted when all hell broke loose at the opening bell, as a major brawl opened proceedings. Once things calmed down, the Wyatts took control of the match in the early going, although The Shield rebounded with flurries of offence when the Hounds Of Justice were able to make occasional tags. A Bray Wyatt-Roman Reigns exchange drew great heat from the crowd, and the fans were only drawn in more when the Wyatts regained control following a Luke Harper dropkick to Dean Ambrose, and Erick Rowan unleashing a painful-looking head crush submission hold with his clenched fists.

Seth Rollins tagged in and took this great match to another higher level with some phenomenal offence: a top rope German suplex was avoided with a stunning backdrop, and he followed that up with a suicide dive out of one side of the ring and a diving knee out of the other. Wyatt countered with a running back splash, and Harper unleashed an unexpected tope to the floor, followed by a similar dive by Rollins. The announcer's tables were then torn apart and as Bray and Ambrose fought through the audience, Rowan and Harper drove Rollins through one of the tables Shield-style. Back in the ring, Reigns made a great comeback on the Wyatts (his Superman Punch was an appropriate offensive weapon in this situation), but with Bray back in the mix, the numbers game caught up to Reigns and Roman was dispatched with Sister Abigail to give the win to the Wyatts.

This was exceptional. The match had been considered a future dream match for a long time, and whilst most expected it to be saved until WrestleMania, it was still great to see it happen on this show. By far the match of the night, it was also the best match to date for the Wyatt members, and for the Shield it was as good as their outstanding debut battle against Ryback and Team Hell No at TLC 2012. The seeds have been ever-so-slightly sewn that The Shield will break up on the Road To WrestleMania, so it remains to be seen if this result will have any impact on how long the faction will remain together. It'd be great to see a rematch at some point though, because this was superb.

AJ Lee defended her Divas Title against Cameron in a match that few really wanted to see. Judging by the way in which on-screen storylines were heading, it appeared that Cameron's fellow Funkadactyl partner Naomi would be getting the title shot here against AJ, but an eye injury suffered a few weeks back ruled her out, and so WWE decided to insert her dancing friend into that slot instead.

The downside is that Cameron isn't as athletic or as charismatic as Naomi, meaning that this match against the accomplished Divas titleholder had that dreaded filler feeling, especially since the action wasn't anything close to being special. To make matters worse, Tamina Snuka interfered to attack Cameron, resulting in the challenger winning by disqualification as fans booed. WWE would have been better off leaving this match off the show completely, since it benefitted nobody (Cameron may have won, but there is virtually no chance that she is going to end AJ's long reign as Divas Champion).

Batista was meant to fight Alberto Del Rio next, but ADR came out in a tracksuit and on crutches, stating that he was injured and couldn't compete. This was revealed to be a ruse, as Del Rio removed the trackie and pounded The Animal with one of the crutches. From there, Del Rio took control of the match, and had Batista in danger with the Cross Armbreaker. But Batista rallied and, culminating a short but enjoyable and logical bout, the big man hit ADR with the Batista Bomb for the win.

Of greater note than the action on displayer here were the crowd reactions. Just like at Royal Rumble, the audience here loathed Batista. Chanting "Boo-tista!" and loudly jeering his comebacks, and making their approval of the heel Del Rio clear, the reaction to Batista bordered on cruel, when you consider that his character hasn't done anything since his return to warrant the boos. They also chanted for hometown boy Brock Lesnar to appear, but that didn't happen at any point on the show (I'm not sure why). The match gave Batista something to do as he awaits confirmation of his WrestleMania opponent, but the reaction here suggests that WWE is really going to struggle to have Batista cheered on in the Mercedes-Benz Superdome when he gets his title shot. There is still time for WWE to find a remedy to the situation, and it's clear that it has to do something; a straight Batista vs. Randy Orton title match in the main event slot at WM could be the most poorly-received Mania match ever.

Which brings us to the main event of this show, the Elimination Chamber match for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. The slightly ramshackle line-up included titleholder Randy Orton, John Cena, Daniel Bryan, Sheamus, Cesaro and Christian. It was weird seeing Captain Charisma inserted into such a big match so soon after his abrupt return from injury, and though "Peeps" are now more invested in the likes of Daniel Bryan than the man they were once fiercely loyal to, it nevertheless stood that Christian was main eventing in the final PPV before WrestleMania. Same for Cesaro, except that his momentum has been steadily increasing over recent weeks, and his crowd-pleasing signature moves combined with superb performances (and upset wins like the recent SD victory over Randy Orton) suggest that he could be in line for an interesting future over the next few months.

Cesaro and Sheamus began the match with some physical exchanges. Daniel Bryan was #3 and came out to a massive pop; as if it couldn't have been predicted beforehand, Bryan was by far the crowd favourite in this match. Christian was in next, and despite his babyface status, he acted slightly heelish when he rammed the door of one of the Chamber pods into Bryan's arm. John Cena came in next to a predictably hostile response, and the boos for Cena only increased when he had a thrilling square-off with the too-over-for-words Bryan. Cesaro elicited a huge cheer as he struck Cena with a massive mid-air uppercut, around which time defending titleholder Randy Orton was the sixth and final man to enter the action, with no eliminations having occurred up to this point.

Which of course meant that they would now come thick and fast: once Orton had taken a fair share of punishment (including a ridiculous 30-rotation Giant Swing by Cesaro), the Viper recovered enough to hit a suplex off the ropes to Sheamus, which Christian followed with a major splash off one of the pods to surprisingly have the Celtic Warrior eliminated first. Christian didn't last much longer though, as he almost immediately tasted a Bryan Running Knee to have him removed from proceedings. Another Bryan-Cena square-off led to the impressive sight of Cesaro suplexing Cena whilst he had Bryan in AA position, but Cena countered with an AA to Cesaro himself, and after locking in the STF, the Swiss Superman tapped out, although his brilliant effort on the night and in recent weeks make him one to watch going forward.

Three men were left, but three quickly became two as the Wyatt Family somehow found a way into the Chamber and pounded Cena to the extent that he was pinned by Orton (to loud "Thank you Wyatts!" chants, which illustrates how much this crowd hated Cena). The run-in pretty much confirms the Cena-Bray match for WrestleMania which was first teased back at Royal Rumble. From there, it was Orton vs. Bryan, so the audience were obviously wanting Bryan to win the WWE Title. During this time, (Corporate) Kane found a way to enter the match, and he too took blows from Bryan, who was on fire as he levelled Orton with a Running Knee. Kane interrupted the cover and took further abuse, before an Orton RKO appeared to end it. When Bryan kicked out, the fans erupted, believing that WWE would atone for the Royal Rumble situation with Bryan winning the title here. But instead, another shot by Kane led Bryan into a second RKO, which allowed Orton to win the match and retain the title, much to the dismay of the Minneapolis crowd.

On the surface, it seems that WWE had raised and dashed fan hopes for Bryan again. However, the clear emphasis on Bryan's Authority-caused setbacks by Michael Cole and the lingering close-ups on the faces of disappointed fans, and Bryan himself, suggests that WWE were pointing this out for a reason. Are WWE planning to acquiesce to fan demands and find a way for Bryan to actually get that WrestleMania title opportunity? WWE must surely realise that presenting Orton vs. Batista will flatline after emphasising the latest obstacle put in front of Bryan. The story has only one ending; the question is, will WWE deliver it? That was the point to ponder after an impressive main event within the chain-link structure.

So, that was Elimination Chamber. The WWE Title match remains the same as it had been beforehand, but could the closing scenes provide a hint that Daniel Bryan might just find a way to crash the WM main event party? If not, he will surely oppose the Authority in some way at Mania. Elsewhere, John Cena vs. Bray Wyatt now seems assured, and the lack of a Brock Lesnar appearance suggests his opponent will be somebody completely different (The Undertaker?). The six-man tag was by far the match of the night, but the headliner was also worth watching, and the opener exceeded expectations. WWE still has many gaps to fill in order to satisfy fans, and it remains to be seen if WWE and CM Punk can reach a compromise on their differences, but enough developments happened and enough subtle hints for upcoming plot twists happened that Elimination Chamber just about served its purpose, setting up what should be a memorable WrestleMania. Hopefully, WWE will ensure that WM XXX is remembered for the right reasons rather than the wrong reasons.

Overall Rating: 7.5/10 - Good

Thursday, 26 May 2016

WWE Payback 2014

Image Source: Bleacher Report
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Genre: Wrestling
Produced By: WWE
Format: Pay-Per-View
Date: June 1 2014
Location: Allstate Arena, Rosemont, Illinois, USA
Attendance: 13,311

The second annual Payback event promised a double main event, which were likely to bring an end to the rivalries between Evolution and The Shield and the long-running saga between John Cena and Bray Wyatt. Although the previous PPV Extreme Rules is based around stipulations, both of these big matches had unique rules in the form of No Holds Barred Elimination and Last Man Standing respectively.

One thing which Payback would not have is a WWE Title match, since Daniel Bryan's presumed defence against Kane was postponed due to a Bryan neck injury. Would Bryan vacate the title on this show? That was a key storyline heading into Payback, with many speculating that Bryan really could have to vacate his crown depending on the severity of his injury. Add to that an intriguing under card and the usually rabid Chicago crowd (many of whom would be bellowing support for the recently-departed CM Punk, no doubt), and you potentially have a pretty exciting supershow on your hands.

The Kick-Off Show featured the end of another rivalry (I was going to say it was a smaller feud but I won't) between Hornswoggle and El Torito, as the pint-sized grapplers battled in a Hair vs. Mask match. It's still strange to see Hornswoggle as a heel, with 3MB cheering him on, but it's stranger still to notice that he and Torito (accompanied by Los Matadores) actually have pretty good chemistry (look no further than their WeeLC match prior to Extreme Rules). This was another surprisingly good match, which ended with Torito picking up the win and Swoggle having his head shaved.

Prior to the opening match between Sheamus and Cesaro for the United States Title, Cesaro's agent Paul Heyman acknowledged the loud "CM Punk!" chants by noting that he wasn't in the arena, and was instead watching a hockey game (an NHL game involving the local Blackhawks). The Punk chants have rung out ever since his abrupt departure after Royal Rumble, and given his lack of a reappearance at the Raw in Chicago back in March nor at WrestleMania XXX, this show represented the last realistic chant that Punk would resurface in WWE, at least for the time being. That he didn't suggests that his absence will be permanent and that if he ever returns, it won't be for a long time.

Taking the Punk element away, Sheamus vs. Cesaro was a really good, physical match. Combining Sheamus' full-on punches and kicks with Cesaro's lethal-looking uppercuts, this was a typically well-executed and stiff opener, which had the crowd's attention all the way. Although Cesaro is inexplicably still in a heel role, the Chicago audience (usually a smarky, heel-loving crowd at the best of times) were fully behind the Swiss Superman, especially when he pulled off his signature Giant Swing. Most (myself included) were expecting a title change here to build on Cesaro's momentum, both before WrestleMania and post-Mania as a "Paul Heyman Guy". Instead, Sheamus (who only won the title on May 5, to be fair) pulled off the unlikely win with a roll-up on Cesaro, much to the surprise and to the disdain of many in attendance.

It's possible that this feud will continue until Money In The Bank, and Cesaro will capture the title then. If that isn't the plan, though, then this will seem like an odd result, since Cesaro will benefit from such a title reign at this point more than the Celtic Warrior. It may also be time to consider a Sheamus heel turn; this match proved that he's still a very capable wrestler, but a switch to the dark side could be what he needs to return to the main event scene. The Chicago crowd certainly had no problem booing Sheamus here.

The second match on the PPV portion of Payback was a tag team affair, pitting RybAxel (Ryback and Curtis Axel) against The Brotherhood (Cody Rhodes and Goldust). The brothers Dust have been somewhat demoted since their Tag Team Title loss to The New Age Outlaws prior to Royal Rumble, but they remain quite popular and against the rarely-pushed RybAxel combo, one assumed that they would pull off the win here. Instead, as with the opener, we got a surprise result, as a by-the-numbers doubles affair ended with Ryback avoiding Cody's Disaster Kick by catching him on his shoulders and drilling him with Shell Shocked for the win. (Incidentally, did you know that this was Ryback's first PPV win since Money In The Bank 2012?)

Afterwards, Cody seemed to tease a heel turn when he rebuffed Goldust's attempts to console him over the loss, and noted that he was no longer a suitable tag team partner for his gold-painted brother. It didn't include a sneak attack, so Cody certainly hasn't turned bad yet, but it does appear that the Cody-Goldust tag team is history, at least for now. Cody has excelled as a villain in the past and given the decline in fortunes of the Rhodes stars over the last few months, it certainly wouldn't be a bad idea to turn Cody heel on Goldust and have the brothers clash. We shall see if that is indeed the plan going forward.

Rusev was up next, taking on Big E. Rusev is clearly being built up as the next unstoppable foreign menace/monster heel, with his push resembling that of Umaga in 2006 (which worked very well) and Tensai in 2012 (which WWE abandoned after about eight weeks). Therefore, Big E (who only had a lengthy Intercontinental Title reign ended at the previous PPV by Bad News Barrett, remember) was pitted against the Bulgarian Brute for one reason: to put him over as a killer.

Fortunately, the two big men avoided what could have been a slow, dull battle of the big men by using their athleticism and delving into their respective repertoires to deliver a pretty good match. They weren't given much time, but they made the most of it with several major spots, such as a Rusev German suplex, a totally insane Big E spear to the floor on Rusev (which we first saw against Dean Ambrose at Hell In A Cell 2013; that really did take spectators by surprise on that night) and a brutal Rusev superkick which took Big E down, and led the foreign fighter to pick up the submission win with the Accolade. Whereas Extreme Rules provided something only slightly better than jobber fodder for Rusev, this did a much better job of showcasing Rusev as being more than just another big man, and by having him defeat a recent titleholder in convincing fashion, Rusev's rise up the ranks is assured. Credit to Big E who, as stated, put on a show here and made sure he wouldn't just be remembered on this night for submitting to the future main event heel.

Bo Dallas vs. Kofi Kingston was meant to happen next, but before it could officially get under way, Kane came out unannounced and decimated Kingston. This was presumably a way to keep Kane in the spotlight after his WWE Title challenge was prevented due to Daniel Bryan's injury. Dallas humorously tried to claim this Kane b beatdown as a win for himself, since Kofi obviously couldn't compete as a result, and of course he told Kofi that he could rebound if he would just "Bo-Lieve!" Just imagine the heat if this had been the segment where CM Punk was name-dropped, and Dallas said something like "CM Punk might return someday. All he has to do, is Bo-Lieve!" In this Chicago environment, that could have been a huge moment for the deluded former NXT Champion.

The next match which actually took place saw Bad News Barrett defend the Intercontinental Title against Rob Van Dam. BNB has really gotten over with his Bad News gimmick in recent times, as evidenced by the crowd's chanting along to his cries of "I'm afraid I've got some Bad News!" His IC Title win at Extreme Rules also suggests faith in Barrett by WWE. All of which meant that, despite RVD remaining popular and him having only resurfaced the night after Mania, the chance of Van Dam winning the gold on this night was unlikely.

Similar to Rusev vs. Big E, this match seemed to exist for the babyface to give the heel a significant win, which is exactly what happened. The bout provided an interesting styles clash between Barrett's modern, smashmouth approach and Van Dam's ECW-influenced kicks and high-flying acrobatics. Against the (allegedly) former bare knuckle fighter Barrett, Van Dam certainly didn't have to hold back with his kicks on this night, as he had to on many occasions during his first WWF/WWE run. RVD remains a favourite of the hardcore crowd, so of course Chicago lapped up Van Dam's act and willed him onto an unlikely victory. Which, as stated, didn't happen; after a series of nice exchanges and big moves, Barrett caught Van Dam with the Bull Hammer for the win. Barrett's push continues, whilst it looks like Van Dam isn't going to achieve a great deal in his current WWE run besides putting over future stars and putting on good matches (which isn't a bad position to be in, to be fair). It was slightly comical that RVD was challenging for the IC Title here since he once claimed, in 2003, that he didn't know how many times he'd held the IC Title and didn't particularly care about the championship. And yes, I know that Van Dam has held that prize on more than one occasion since then.

Following this was a lengthy segment involving Daniel Bryan, his wife Brie Bella and Stephanie McMahon. In a nutshell, Stephanie wanted Bryan to vacate the WWE World Heavyweight Title, and he chose not to (without actually saying words to that effect). Of particular note, Stephanie humorously told Bryan that the people wanted him to quit "just like CM Punk!" Talk about acknowledging the elephant in the room; what heat that got in Chicago. It also provided the first, true public hint of WWE knocking Punk for his walk-out (Paul Heyman talked about Punk in his March promo and referred to him on this show, but neither were a criticism of his decision to depart WWE). Perhaps we'll be waiting a little bit longer now for Punk to return to WWE (if he ever does).

Back to this segment: after Stephanie and Brie exchanged words, during which time Brie called Stephanie a bitch (surely Bryan had greater reason to utter this remark than Brie?), Brie announced that she was quitting (oh, Brie was getting fired if Bryan didn't vacate the title; I forgot to mention that) and slapped Stephanie to a huge pop. Despite Brie supposedly ending her WWE career here, it's clearly a storyline, meaning it's possible that WWE is setting something up here involving Stephanie and Brie. Either that or WWE is just killing time until Bryan is cleared to resume in-ring action. We'll find out for sure soon enough.

John Cena vs. Bray Wyatt under Last Man Standing rules would mark the end of a feud which first began at Royal Rumble. Cena beat Wyatt at WrestleMania; Bray defeated Cena in a Steel Cage bout at Extreme Rules. This would be the rubber match, and since Cena has had memorable LMS bouts in the past (most notably against Umaga and Edge, but also against Batista and Alberto Del Rio), this had the potential to be a fun brawl. Cena was backed up by The Usos, in response to Wyatt being accompanied by his trusty followers Erick Rowan and Luke Harper. The signature moves came out early here, since there were clearly bigger spots planned later in the match, and this came to the forefront once the ringside extras got involved. Unusually for a major PPV match, a significant amount of time was devoted to the managers, for lack of a better word, as The Usos and Rowan and Harper had a crazy brawl, both with the participants (an Uso corkscrew to all involved) and themselves (an Uso butt-smack to Rowan through a table, and a Harper suplex to another Uso through two more tables).

That said, Cena and Wyatt were putting on a great display themselves, with brutal chairshots, dramatic close-calls to the LMS 10-count, and some brutal spots involving steel stairs (Wyatt stomped Cena's skull on the steps; Cena hurled the steps to the floor, striking Wyatt in the process, in a nod to Cena's LMS match with Umaga at Royal Rumble 2007 which featured the same move). More finishers and further interference followed, all with the Chicago crowd loving what was a pretty damn good match. After destroying the ringside barricades with their bodies, Cena and Wyatt brawled through the crowd, inadvertently set off pyro (in the storyline, of course), and Cena finally hit Wyatt with one more Attitude Adjustment into a container, and slammed equipment onto the box to trap Wyatt inside, leaving him unable to answer the 10-count.

This was a superb brawl; it was Cena's best match of 2014 so far, and Wyatt's best match to date period (well, besides maybe his scrap with Daniel Bryan at Royal Rumble). It's unknown as to what path Cena will take next, but it's clear from this result that the Cena-Wyatt feud ended here. As for Bray: he'll need to decisively win his next rivalry whomever that might be against, because while he's moonlighted in a main event spot opposite Cena, and has improved tremendously since his official main roster debut back in July 2013, the losses he suffered here and at Mania could hinder his future prospects if he isn't handled correctly going forward. As an aside, the interaction between reigning Tag Team titleholders The Usos and Rowan and Harper suggests that they will meet for those championships at some point soon, probably at Money In The Bank.

Paige defended her Divas Title against Alicia Fox in the penultimate bout of the evening. Fox had surprisingly pinned Paige in her home country on the London edition of Raw, in between her developing something of a modern-day Loose Cannon character by randomly acting weird and doing all sorts of crazy antics after her recent matches. That being said, it was still Alicia Fox, who whilst a competent grappler peaked with her surprise Divas Title win in 2010, and she was facing newcomer Paige who is just beginning to establish herself as the new face of the women's scene in WWE. Therefore, it wasn't hard to predict the result.

And so it proved: the match was okay, and more intriguing than Paige vs. Tamina Snuka at Extreme Rules, but following Cena vs. Wyatt and being the filler before Evolution vs. The Shield was always going to provide a challenge for the women here. Especially when, as noted, the outcome wasn't really in any doubt. Paige won with the PTO (it would have been cool to see Paige hit the Paige Turner on the long-legged Fox). Two PPV wins for the fresh champion Paige, but I sense that WWE needs to provide her with real competition for her to shine as intended. Fox ran backstage almost in tears, in character obviously, or possibly for real since this was probably the best that she can now hope for in her WWE tenure.

The main event, as noted earlier, saw Evolution battle The Shield to culminate a rather enjoyable feud between two supergroups. No Holds Barred Elimination was the theme of this one, which began in a chaotic fashion as everyone paired off for a one-on-one scrap, before order was restored and Batista (dressed in bizarre blue attire which amusingly led to #Bluetista trending on Twitter) and Seth Rollins began the match properly in the ring. From there, everyone took turns in the ring, with a Triple H-Roman Reigns square-off being a standout moment, before Evolution began controlling the bout by dominating Dean Ambrose and isolating him in the ring. The action was really good, although the slower nature of this compared to Extreme Rules and the fact that there would be several eliminations (meaning that the next potential fall would not end the match) meant that the crowd noise wasn't at a high level for much of the midsection of this match.

Ambrose eventually tagged out to Reigns, who went on a tear against all three Evolution adversaries (this sequence did raise the audience noise levels). It looked like Reigns would pick up the first elimination, perhaps by pinning Batista or Randy Orton (HHH wasn't going out first for obvious reasons), but instead a six-man brawl resumed at ringside, and HHH clocked Rollins with a piece of metal. At this point, Evolution began to really control the match as with Rollins down, Reigns was the next man to be taken out with a Shield-style triple powerbomb through the Spanish announcer's table. The heels did a Shield-style pose to mock the faces, only for Ambrose and Rollins to interrupt and resume the scrap in a cool moment. But Seth and Dean were dropped again near the aisleway, this time with the assistance of a steel chair as Ambrose took some shots to the back and Rollins received a Pedigree right into the chair.

From here, it turned brutal as Evolution dragged Reigns into the ring and belted him with a kendo stick, removing Reigns' Shield protection gear to really mark up Roman's back badly. That they didn't go for the cover indicated that the eliminations would come thick and fast, since we were 20 minutes-plus into the match by this point. Ambrose got involved again but once more he was beaten down, but back up near the entrance way, Rollins from out of nowhere, hit an incredible dive from the base of the giant screen onto all three members of Evolution. The Shield were finally making a comeback and after some heavy-duty blows and signature blows, the eliminations finally came in style: Reigns pinned Batista after a Spear, Ambrose removed Orton from play with Dirty Deeds, and after a tease when HHH clocked Ambrose with a sledgehammer, Rollins caught The Game with a flying knee that led to Roman Spearing HHH and winning the match, ensuring an unprecedented clean sweep for The Shield. Evolution well and truly put The Shield over here in a match that was longer and at times slower than their previous battle, but in terms of emotion and drama, combined with the thrilling action, was just as good if not better than their previous match, and was ultimately a great way to end Payback.

I normally cover the PPV events and then speculate on what could come out of the shows as a result, but in this case I have to mention that on Raw the following night, not only did Batista quit Evolution (and apparently WWE as well), but Seth Rollins shockingly turned on his Shield brethren to join The Authority in a twist that nobody saw coming. Does this make Seth a member of Evolution? More importantly, was it the right decision to break up the much-lauded Shield at this stage? Time will tell, but their almost flawless push since their debut at Survivor Series 2012 combined with the flattering booking of their victories over Evolution raises hopes that all (or at least one of the members) will benefit from this plot development, and that it won't be mishandled like so many key events have in the past.

Payback 2014, then, was a very entertaining show and definitely lived up to the hype. The two big matches over-delivered, and the non-wrestling segment served its purpose. Add to that some good matches elsewhere on the card and a few notable storyline moments (Cody and Goldust potentially splitting up, Brie Bella quitting, Hornswoggle having his head shaved), and you had a great three hours of wrestling action. The lack of a WWE Title match, whilst obviously understandable, hurt the significance of this show, and it stands to reason that had Daniel Bryan competed on the card, in the manner that everyone knows he can, then Payback could have been the undisputed card of the year. Even without a WWE Title bout, though, this was as good as any PPV that we have seen so far this year, at least from an in-ring standpoint, assisted once again by WWE's most rabid audience in the form of the Chicago crowd.

Overall Rating: 8/10 - Very Good

Monday, 21 September 2015

The Destruction Of The Shield

Image Source: Amazon
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Running Time: 423 Minutes
Certificate: 15
Number Of Discs: 3
Studio: Fremantle Home Entertainment
Released: March 9 2015

Just over a year ago, WWE fans witnessed the shocking break-up of The Shield, with many wondering why one of the most dominant factions in recent memory would be split up, as well as wondering how each member would fare in the future. This DVD includes a documentary on the three members of the group - Seth Rollins, Dean Ambrose and Roman Reigns - and memorable matches involving the trio, as well as a number of bouts after the group dissolved.

The documentary was originally shown on the WWE Network, leading into SummerSlam 2014 where Ambrose would fight Rollins and where Reigns, in his major breakout match, would face Randy Orton. It shows how each man prepared for the biggest event of the summer, as well as delving into the pre-WWE backgrounds of all three (ranging from independents like ROH and CZW or American football in Reigns' case), the adventures of all three in FCW and on NXT, the coming-together of The Shield on WWE TV, their dominance from November 2012 to June 2014, and the ultimate destruction of the group (hence the title of this DVD).

The documentary covers virtually everything that you could expect, given the youth of the three profiled performers. We even get archive ROH and CZW footage for Rollins and Ambrose respectively during their independent days as Tyler Black and Jon Moxley, as well as some interesting stories on behind-the-scenes happenings involving the three men (particularly notable is Rollins' backstage conflicts which almost led to him not being promoted to the main roster). We get good coverage of The Shield's first year-and-a-half in WWE, and of their unexpected demise in June 2014. The feature does feel odd when the three ex-Shield members talk about their SummerSlam matches as if they were real, although it's understandable given that this was previously a pre-SummerSlam Network special. Otherwise, the documentary is very good considering that there isn't a huge amount of history to cover, and that equal time must be allocated between each of the profiled stars. It isn't must-see, but it is definitely worth watching. And even if you've previously seen this on the Network, there are several additional chapters to the main feature.

The match selection is also commendable, and each match is previewed by background comments from one Shield member. We get two really good Rollins-Ambrose matches from Florida Championship Wrestling, and a rare three-way involving the three men in FCW back when Reigns was known as Leakee. The last FCW match is a compelling fight between Ambrose and William Regal, but is tarnished by WWE's decision to include this bout with a black-and-white screen during scenes when Regal's ear is cut open. This is to comply with WWE's PG rating for this DVD, but it either should have been cut or released on a TV-14 compilation; FCW matches aren't on the WWE Network, so unless we get a future Ambrose DVD, we'll never get to see the full-colour transmission of this match. (It's also worth noting that this was the last ever FCW TV match which, when you watch it, feels like the developmental territory ended on a true low note, which is odd.)

We then see a fun NXT Title victory for Seth, making him the first NXT Champion, against Jinder Mahal and Roman Reign's NXT debut against CJ Parker. The match listing then jumps to The Shield's in-ring WWE debut, a superb TLC war against Ryback and Team Hell No from TLC 2012. With the possible exception of Kevin Owens defeating John Cena at Elimination Chamber 2015, this was the best main-stage debut for a new character or characters in the last decade in WWE. We don't get The Shield's WrestleMania bow (at XXIX), disappointingly, but we do get their first championship victories for the US Title and Tag Titles from Extreme Rules 2013, and a very exciting WWE Tag Team Title match with The Uso's from the Money In The Bank 2013 Kick-Off show.

The numbers increase for the Survivor Series 2013 elimination match that showcased Reigns, and the following six-man tag between The Shield and The Wyatt Family from Elimination Chamber 2014 is fantastic. The subsequent Shield-Evolution No Holds Barred bout from Payback 2014 is also engaging, if a little slow, as is the 2014 Money In The Bank Ladder Match, by which point The Shield has dissolved. We get the two SummerSlam 2014 matches that had been discussed (Rollins vs. Ambrose under Lumberjack rules, and Reigns vs. Orton), which is a nice touch, and two Raw matches pitting Rollins and Ambrose (Falls Count Anywhere) and Reigns respectively bring this compilation to a close. (There are also a few intriguing Blu-ray exclusive matches, so I'd suggest getting the Blu-ray over the DVD if you're trying to decide between the two.)

It is hoped, or has been proven since the end of this DVD's timeline (with Reigns winning the Royal Rumble and Rollins becoming WWE World Heavyweight Champion at WrestleMania 31), that the futures for all three men are brighter than their past and even their run in The Shield, so we are likely to see at least one of these performers profiled in another DVD in the future. Judging their careers up to the early post-Shield period, though, this DVD does as good a job as could be expected: the documentary is informative, insightful and entertaining, and the majority of the bonus matches are very good, with a few Match Of The Year contenders thrown in there.

If you didn't believe in The Shield, you will after watching this DVD.

Overall Rating: 8.5/10 - Excellent