Showing posts with label WrestleMania 32. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WrestleMania 32. Show all posts

Monday, 18 July 2016

WrestleMania 32

Image Source: Amazon
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Running Time: 533 Minutes
Certificate: 15
Number Of Discs: 3
Studio: Fremantle Home Entertainment
Released: June 6 2016

(To read a full event review of WWE WrestleMania 32, click here.)

For the thirty-second time, WWE presented WrestleMania on April 3 2016 from AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, and this would be the most attended WWE show of all-time with an announced attendance of 101,763. In the ring, though, the reaction to WrestleMania ranged from mixed to only slightly positive, with some crapping all over the event in general. At the time, I thought the action was pretty good but that the creative decisions were questionable, and whilst there were some strong outings, there were no true classic WrestleMania matches. So, how does the event hold up on DVD a few months down the line? As it turns out, little has changed.

The opening seven-man Ladder match for the Intercontinental Title remains a thrilling attraction, although Zack Ryder's shock win loses impact knowing that his reign would ultimately last 24 hours. AJ Styles vs. Chris Jericho is another very good match between the two veterans, which would have seemed better had the crowd reaction been stronger. Jericho's win seemed odd at the time, and seemed even stranger when Styles became number one contender to the WWE Title the following night on Raw by pinning Y2J himself. It seems this result was a way of Vince McMahon once again proving that those who made their names outside of WWE are "inferior" to his talent, in the same way that Sting lost to Triple H at WrestleMania 31.

The New Day vs. The League Of Nations was clearly a set-up for the post-match fracas involving Shawn Michaels, Mick Foley and Steve Austin. That perhaps explains why the LON won, but giving New Day different opposition and letting Sheamus and friends just have that angle to themselves with Austin and pals might have been better; despite the Booty-O's cereal entrance, the entire segment felt a bit pointless, especially without the Tag Team Titles at stake. The three-legend cameo is fun, although it's easy to understand why people weren't happy at several current names being easily dropped by former icons. Either way, the LON winning was silly (one fan's head went into his hands), especially since it marked New Day's only PPV defeat since their Tag Team Title reign began at SummerSlam 2015.

The much-anticipated No Holds Barred Street Fight between Brock Lesnar and Dean Ambrose was considered a big disappointment at the time. On second viewing, the match itself is not that bad, but the ending is abrupt; it feels like the last five minutes are suddenly taken away with the drop of an F5 onto several chairs. Yes, the bout was a let-down, but had it been given sufficient time (and bear in mind how long this card lasted), it probably would have been fondly remembered. On the other hand, the three-way between Charlotte, Sasha Banks and Becky Lynch remains a great match, possibly the strongest of the evening, and ushered in a new era for women's wrestling on the main WWE roster, along with the re-introduction of the WWE Women's Championship. Charlotte winning remains a let-down, though, and fans are still waiting for Sasha's big moment (will it come at SummerSlam?).

The Undertaker vs. Shane McMahon inside Hell In A Cell is much better when watching it again, perhaps because the slow pace is to be expected, meaning that the big spots (of which there are plenty) have a bigger impact, none more than Shane's death-defying elbow drop off the top of the cage. It did culminate the most poorly-written major storyline in WWE, perhaps ever, and the fact that Shane has been in some measure of control ever since despite losing has never been properly explained. By the way, how ironic is it that Shane's whole purpose for returning in storyline terms was to run Raw, and now ultimately he's ended up with SmackDown, meaning that in the long run, nothing changed?

The Andre The Giant Memorial Battle Royal has its moments but lasts a bit too long, and the majority of its content and entrants are filler. The segment between The Rock, The Wyatt Family and John Cena is entertaining, but again lasts a little too long. I don't have the same feeling of anger that others do about the Wyatts being "buried" here, but one can certainly understand why fans would feel that way after watching this angle. Finally, Triple H vs. Roman Reigns for the WWE Title is actually not as bad as people would have you think; the crowd are definitely into it, the majority are just not into supporting the babyface Roman Reigns. That being said, it is the least exciting main event at Mania since The Miz vs. John Cena from WM XXVII, meaning that this Mania has an average conclusion, rather than the feeling of excitement after watching Daniel Bryan and Seth Rollins capture WWE's top prize at the previous two Manias.

So, the main card of WrestleMania 32 is definitely enjoyable to watch the second time around. Because it's on DVD, you almost have to break up your viewing sessions of the five-hour card, unlike the live version which was one long slog, and which came after a two-hour Kick-Off show, meaning that you're not exhausted and checking the time during the last few segments of the event. However, it is far from the best WrestleMania you'll ever see. The entertainment and the spectacle of the record-breaking crowd, along with the star-studded appearances, some very good matches and that elbow drop by Shane make it a worthwhile WrestleMania, but if you're ranking this alongside other Mania shows, the best you could probably hope for is to put it in the top ten; it will never unseat Mania X-Seven as the best WM of all-time.

The only noticeable edit on the main card is the overdubbing of Thunderstruck by AC/DC with a generic track during the brief Dallas Cheerleaders dance performance prior to The Rock's entrance. What have been brutally edited, though, are the three Kick-Off Show matches included on the DVD, as is the norm. Presumably due to Mania lasting five hours, of the three bonus bouts (Kalisto vs. Ryback, Team Total Divas vs. Team B.A.D. & Blonde and The Usos vs. The Dudley Boyz), Ryback is the only performer whose entrance is included here, and for his bout and the ten-women match, on the night a commercial break interrupted both encounters, but it feels like a couple of minutes have been chopped from the second part of each match, in order to squeeze them onto this set. For those involved in Kick-Off Show bouts, not only did they only compete at WM 32 on a technicality, but their matches have been edited to shreds on the home video release. No wonder Ryback was miffed, eh?

Fortunately, the WWE Hall Of Fame 2016 induction ceremony is here in full, although the inductions of Jacqueline and Stan Hansen are swopped around so that discs two and three each have the "correct" running time. I would recommend to WWE that WrestleMania is released on a four-disc DVD next year, because if the plan going forward is for Mania to last five hours each year, then the DVD will seem so edited down (as this one is) that fans would be better off just having the WWE Network and watching everything from Mania weekend on there (which incidentally has the two-hour Kick-Off Show in full). Also inducted were The Godfather, The Fabulous Freebirds (whose long induction is the highlight of the show and includes some great stories), Big Boss Man (posthumous induction), Snoop Dogg (celebrity inductee), Joan Lunden (Warrior Award recipient) and Sting, who announces his retirement at the end of his speech. This is an entertaining HOF ceremony though not quite the best that we've seen, although it is surreal to see Ric Flair, who is supposed to be inducting Sting, turn his speech into a mini-HOF induction for himself; at one point, it feels like he is inducting Ricky Steamboat rather than The Stinger.

Other minor notes: the menu music for this DVD is the same one that has been used since the WM XXVII DVD, which whilst representing some nice continuity, could suggest that it's time for a change (it's not like the theme is even used on television, meaning it is nowhere near as iconic as the classic WrestleMania themes used in the 1990s). The artwork is as good as you would expect, with many photographs from the card on the digipak; it should be noted that this underlines which matches mattered most to WWE, although oddly there is only one picture from Lesnar vs. Ambrose, and three from the (pre-show) Usos vs. Dudleyz clash. And there are no additional extras due to the run-time for both Mania and the Hall Of Fame, which is another reason why I hope for a four-disc release of WrestleMania on DVD next year.

So, should you buy this DVD? If you're a collector, then yes; if you haven't seen the Mania festivities from this year, absolutely; and if you buy wrestling DVDs simply based on whether they're entertaining, then you should find this to be a wise purchase. If you own the Network, though, then there is no exclusive content here that warrants a purchase (not to mention the edited-down Kick-off matches), and if the card left a bad taste in your mouth at the time, then it probably won't be that much better to watch the second time around, even though some bouts seem better than they did during the live presentation. Therefore, as the rating below indicates, this is an undeniably fun wrestling DVD set, but Network subscribers should have a think about whether this DVD is really worth buying.

Overall Rating: 8/10 - Very Good

Monday, 4 April 2016

WWE WrestleMania 32

Image Source: ProWrestling.com
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Genre: Wrestling
Produced By: WWE
Format: Pay-Per-View
Date: April 3 2016
Location: AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas, USA
Attendance: 101,763

After all the anticipation and the build-up, WrestleMania 32 finally happened! The biggest wrestling show of the year was hyped as being WWE's biggest show ever, even with injuries decimating the original line-up on multiple occasions, and other factors preventing some names from the past getting actively involved. That being said, the card still promised a stacked list of matches and, with the increased running time probably ensuring that all the bouts would get appropriate time, there was a genuine chance that this could be one of the greatest WrestleManias to date, even if some scheduled matches weren't what most fans would have preferred. So, how did WM 32 turn out?

Before beginning with the review, I should acknowledge how long the event ran. In the past, WrestleMania has lasted four hours with one or two pre-show matches, with the exception of WM XX which was 4 1/2 hours with no warm-up bouts. This year, despite the two-hour Kick-Off Show beforehand, it was still noted that Mania 32 would go over four hours to some extent. That ended up being by "a lot"; when Mania finally ended, the main card was very close to five hours long, and with the Kick-Off Show again lasting two hours and featuring three matches, the entire thing ended up lasting close to seven hours! To be fair, this made WrestleMania 32 feel extremely special, but since most weren't expecting such a long running time, it did mean that most viewers were flagging come the final hour. I do hope that WWE continues this going forward, since at least next year we'll be prepared for a (very) long WrestleMania.

Getting to the action, then, beginning with the Kick-Off Show, and the very first match pitting Kalisto against Ryback for the United States Championship. It felt like this bout started too early; beginning with 80 minutes of the preview show remaining, the massive AT&T Stadium looked to be around a quarter full, at best; rumours of ticket machine problems no doubt prevented some fans getting in, but it still seemed bizarre that a venue would look so empty on a stage like Mania. Back to the match, though: Ryback played up his bullying heel persona by mocking Kalisto's size and taking advantage of his own larger frame by throwing Kalisto around hard in the early going. The defending champion fought back with some high-flying moves (albeit less than we normally see from him), and sent Ryback hard into the crowd barrier at ringside. The Big Guy fought back and signalled that he was ready to end it, but a reversal of corner-based offence involving the removal of a turnbuckle pad led Kalisto to hit a Salida Del Sol to pin Ryback and get the win, a second upset victory over Ryback (having pinned him at the Manchester episode of SmackDown last November).

As a warm-up match, it was okay, and it gave Kalisto a big win on the most important night of the year. It wasn't anything special or memorable, and the timing of this match in front of an almost empty venue felt weird, but as a way to get things rolling, it served its purpose. I was surprised at the result, as I thought Ryback might win the title here, but Kalisto successfully retaining is a good sign for him that WWE may have some plans for the high-flyer, who is starting to establish himself as an important member of the roster.

Kick-Off match two, held in the second hour (which was broadcast on USA Network; the entire two-hour broadcast was live on WWE Network), was a ten-diva bout pitting Team Total Divas (Brie Bella, Alicia Fox, Natalya, Paige and Eva Marie, the only member of the team to be booed, and unsurprisingly so) against Team B.A.D. and Blonde (Naomi, Tamina, Lana, Summer Rae and Emma). This was a standard women's wrestling based on the pre-NXT era, as it generally existed to give all ten women a spot on the show and provided each with an opportunity (at times a very brief moment) to shine with their own signature spots. In her first official WWE match, Lana's basic offence looked good, and even Eva Marie's moves were performed well. In the end, Brie made Lana submit to the Yes Lock to get the win to a big ovation (many more fans had entered the stadium by this point), and afterwards the still-injured Nikki Bella came out to a big pop to celebrate. The babyfaces all hoisted Brie up with heavy rumours that this or her involvement on the post-Mania Raw would mark her retirement.

In past years, this match would have been the extent of the participation for females on Mania night, and even then it wouldn't have lasted as long as this bout did, which is a positive sign. As noted, this match was really just a way to get these women on the card, so like Kalisto vs. Ryback it served its purpose to that end. My big gripe with this one (and I should have mentioned this in relation to the opener too since it happened there as well) was WWE's decision to include a commercial break during the match. It's annoying enough on Kick-Off Shows for other events, but on WrestleMania's preview show? It's frustrating to the viewers and it must be disheartening to the performers; despite WWE saying that all matches were a part of Mania regardless of their positioning, breaking up matches with a commercial is a heavy indicator by WWE that these early bouts really weren't a priority. I really hope that WWE ends this trend after this show.

Before the final match of the Kick-Off Show, Lita (who was on the KO Panel, a group of WWE personalities who run down all the matches from every angle) came to the ring to make a very welcome announcement: the WWE Divas Title (a nice-looking belt, but one which hasn't been very popular in recent times) would on this night be replaced by a new WWE Women's Title, which was a colourful version of the WWE World Championship. Fans responded very positively to this, as it was a big step forward in establishing the women's division as a vital part of modern-day WWE. I'm not sure why WWE tried to suggest that there hadn't previously been a Women's Championship, but that aside this was a good moment, and a nice way to add some last-minute anticipation to the women's three-way on the main show.

The final pre-show bout was The Usos vs. The Dudley Boyz. Based on Bubba Ray and D-Von turning heel on Jimmy and Jey in February, and the Dudleyz' insistence that their days of using tables were over, this was a fast-paced mix of regular spots and some cool vintage double-team spots. The crowd seemed to lean towards The Dudleyz more, but The Usos still had plenty of fans, and it was the twin brothers who picked up the victory after Jimmy (or Jey) cracked D-Von with a big superkick. Afterwards, the Dudleyz pounded the Usos and, to a huge pop, they chose to bring out the tables. But the tables were turned (no pun intended) as the Usos laid out the Dudz on the wood and drilled them through the tables with top rope splashes to end the match presentation on a high.

I liked this match, but would have preferred it lasting a few more minutes and having a place on the main card. There is still scope for this feud to continue with a tables match on PPV, although it's also possible that Bubba Ray goes full-on heel on D-Von and breaks out on his own. It's a bit sad for the Usos that they have been receiving a decent amount of boos recently, which can either be attributed to their link with Roman Reigns or their presentation as super-smiler babyfaces, because they are a really talented tag team whose best days may still be ahead of them. As for the Dudleyz, this was a good return to Mania for them; it remains to be seen whether it is their last appearance on the grand stage.

Three matches in, and we were finally ready for the main WrestleMania show. Fifth Harmony sang America The Beautiful, followed by a WrestleMania clips video package which was apparently voiced over by Kelsey Grammar (the guy who provided Sideshow Bob's voice on The Simpsons). The opening show pyrotechnics were typically exciting to watch, and the crowd size with the entire AT&T Stadium filled looked very impressive, with an expected crowd of 100,000+ on hand. That led us to the opening match, the seven-man Ladder match for the Intercontinental Title with Kevin Owens defending his crown against Dolph Ziggler, The Miz, Sami Zayn (who got a huge pop; Owens did as well, unsurprisingly), Sin Cara, Zack Ryder and Stardust (whose attire had a Dusty Rhodes polka dot theme).

This was a high-octane opener which, to me, was superior to the seven-man Ladder match that kicked off WM 31. There were plenty of big moves, amongst them Zayn hitting a senton bomb to ringside whereby he dived between a ladder; Sin Cara being tipped off a ladder only to land on the top rope and launch a splash to ringside, and Ryder hitting an elbow drop off the top of a very big ladder. Stardust introduced a polka dot-coloured ladder in another, very welcome tribute to the American Dream. Ziggler had a superkick party, and even tuned up the band to hit Sweet Chin Music at one point. In the bout's biggest spot, Cara was tipped off a ladder which led him to splash Stardust through another ladder placed between the ring and the crowd barrier. Owens and Sami had several square-offs during the match, with Sami getting the best of KO after an exchange at the top of a ladder. Miz then tipped Zayn off the ladder (Sami's careful landing made me think that he had found a counter to Miz's prevention, but it wasn't to be). It looked like Miz would be pulling off the unlikely and very unpopular victory here, but out of nowhere Ryder appeared to push Miz off the ladder and took down the prize to become Intercontinental Champion in a huge upset.

This was a really good match with plenty of great moments. It was nice to see the long-neglected Ryder win here, especially since he was only involved as a replacement for the injured Neville. As an underdog stand-in, his victory was definitely a memorable moment. Zayn had a first-class performance when you consider that he had already competed in what may end up being WWE's best match of 2016, an outstanding bout with Shinsuke Nakamura, two nights earlier at NXT: Takeover Dallas. Realistically, Ziggler, Cara, Miz and Stardust were never going to win, so Owens is the only one who was really hindered by this result. Despite Ryder becoming champion, I envision KO regaining the title from Ryder on Raw and then going on to a singles feud with Zayn for the title. In terms of a cool spot-fest and providing a shock outcome, though, this match delivered; and hardcore fans of Owens and Zayn can't complain at Ryder winning considering how much support he had garnered in 2011/2 when his internet show Z True Long Island Story convinced many fans that Ryder was worthy of a big push.

Up next was Chris Jericho vs. AJ Styles. The fourth match of their rivalry, this had the potential to be the show-stealing bout, if not a classic wrestling match. It ended up falling somewhere within that region, but not quite to the level of, say, a Shawn Michaels vs. Kurt Angle or The Undertaker vs. CM Punk. There were a plethora of back-and-forth wrestling moves and counters, a wealth of false finishes and several compelling submission spots whereby, at various points, both looked on the verge of tapping out. Styles (whose attire seemed to channel Eddie Guerrero from his WCW days) hit many of his biggest moves, and successfully executed a slightly underwhelming Styles Clash for a very close two-count (it's safe to say that the Clash is no longer AJ's go-to finisher in WWE). Jericho hit a Codebreaker only for Styles to kick out, and each man withstood almost everything they had to offer; at one point, Y2J even attempted to go for the Styles Clash himself. A Phenomenal Forearm by AJ also couldn't get the job done, and a second attempt by Styles to hit this move ended up being reversed into a second Codebreaker which allowed Jericho (whose attire included the word "GOAT", which stands for Greatest Of All Time, as opposed to referencing a farmyard animal, or even Daniel Bryan; actually, maybe he was) to pick up the win.

This was a great match, and superior to Jericho's bout with CM Punk at WrestleMania XXVIII. The crowd seemed a bit quiet at times, but they were definitely drawn in by the action in the final 5-10 minutes. Styles at his first WrestleMania put forth a great performance, and Jericho proved that at age 45, he definitely still has it. The big talking point here has to be the outcome of Jericho pinning Styles, in this year's equivalent to Triple H pinning Sting at WM 31. Now, AJ had already pinned Y2J twice and has previously been pinned by Y2J (and others, including Kevin Owens), so it isn't the ridiculous result that Sting's defeat a year ago was. But it was still strange to see the extraordinarily-talented Styles lose his first WrestleMania match to a veteran who probably won't wrestle at many more Manias. It also makes you wonder about the direction this feud will take; has the heel Y2J won this rivalry, or will there be an unprecedented FIFTH match to finally settle things? Who knows, but Styles really should have won this match (hell, Fandango pinned Jericho at WM 29); he will no doubt rebound and may achieve a top WWE spot at some point over the next twelve months, but this was so obvious to most onlookers that it's inexplicable that WWE would go the other way. Then again, maybe that's why they did it; to ensure an outcome that few were expecting.

Match three was most memorable for the pre- and post-bout antics. The New Day were expected to have an over-the-top entrance, and that they did with Xavier Woods, Big E and Kofi Kingston coming out of a gigantic box of Booty-O's that tipped over to release hundreds of cereal pieces (Google Booty-O's if you don't know what this is referring to). The League Of Nations had a regular entrance, although Rusev booting Booty-O's everywhere was a comical sight. This six-man tag team match felt like a card-filler, albeit a well-executed one: Sheamus provided laughs by chanting "New Day Sucks!" as he pounded at Xavier's chest. Alberto Del Rio didn't do that much, while Kofi Kingston provided some slick moves. Big E provided the spot of the match with a very dangerous-looking spear through the ropes onto two LON members and onto King Barrett at ringside (Barrett was the only LON member not wrestling here; he was stationed at ringside, perhaps because he is apparently leaving WWE soon). Woods did well in the role of isolated babyface, although he missed a trick by not performing the Dallas theme on his trombone (and where was the mass trombone entrance for New Day?). Most expected New Day to win this non-title affair, but after a Bull Hammer by Barrett caught Woods, Sheamus struck with a Brogue Kick and pinned Xavier to pick up the win for the League Of Nations. Another unexpected result, but with the titles not at stake, this was not a major issue. It gives LON enough momentum to warrant another title shot at New Day which at that point will probably end the feud between these factions.

Post-match, Barrett bragged that no three men in history could beat the LON, which told me that someone was about to get involved; I was expecting the Fabulous Freebirds, although I wondered how this would work with only two members still alive. Instead, Shawn Michaels' music hit to a massive ovation, and HBK shocked everyone by coming out in ring gear, hinting that he was actually about to wrestle. Mick Foley followed, and finally Steve Austin walked out to an ear-splitting pop from the 100,000+ crowd. The three legends came to the ring for a brawl with LON, assisted by New Day, and with each member tasting an icon's finisher, and with Barrett tasting all three moves. After all that, New Day tried to convince the legends to dance with them, with HBK and Foley obliging, and Austin finally getting a bit jiggy with Woods before Stunning him into oblivion. The segment ended with a triple-legend beer bash.

Most knew that Austin, Michaels and Foley would appear in some capacity, so it didn't have the surprise factor of Austin-Hogan-Rock at Mania XXX. But this was still a feel-good moment and a great sight for the Texas fans to see three icons whose careers all began in the Lone Star State. As noted earlier, the New Day entrance and the legends' involvement will be what this part of the show will be most remembered for, so New Day losing didn't harm them at all.

Following that was Brock Lesnar vs. Dean Ambrose in a No Holds Barred Street Fight. Beforehand, this had the potential to be the modern equivalent of Bret Hart vs. Steve Austin at WrestleMania 13 whereby the established main eventer truly makes the rising star even with the underdog losing. Even if it didn't, it still seemed likely to be the most violent match of the PG era with the hype indicating that Ambrose would use some extreme weapons against Lesnar.

Instead, the match to me was a bit of a disappointment. Lesnar took Ambrose to Suplex City early on, as expected, and generally threw Ambrose all over the place. Dean fought back with strikes, kendo stick shots and a low blow to turn things in his favour. Ambrose (who wore a Suplex City shirt with his logo spray-painted over it, although the announcers never acknowledged it) brought a steel chair into the fray and smacked Lesnar's back hard with it. An attempt at a top rope move was reversed into a Lesnar overhead belly-to-belly suplex from the ropes, which was probably the spot of the match. Lesnar later threw Ambrose onto a pile of chairs, although Brock's back caught the worst of the chairs. An Ambrose DDT onto the chairs didn't get the win for the Lunatic Fringe, so Ambrose decided to bring in the barbed wire baseball bat handed to him by Mick Foley. But Lesnar avoided the offence and planted Ambrose with an F5 onto the chairs for the win. That was it: one-two-three.

I didn't expect Ambrose to do much damage with the bat given the PG conditions, but one bloodless shot to the back might have given the match that extra boost, and it's not like Lesnar would have minded taking it. Ambrose had hinted at using Terry Funk's chainsaw early on, but it was obvious that he wouldn't have done so successfully, even if this had been in the original ECW (how exactly could they have pulled it off?). But the match was relatively short on a very long card, we didn't see Ambrose hit Dirty Deeds at any point, and it only took one F5 to beat Ambrose (even if it was on chairs) a year after Roman Reigns kicked out of three F5's. In addition, Ambrose put forth a good performance, but it wasn't even close to the level of Austin at WM 13. Also, whilst most were holding out hope that Ambrose would win, it simply wasn't going to happen; Lesnar has already seen his reputation dented quite a bit in recent months, so a defeat to someone of Ambrose's size at this juncture could have ruined him. And as weird and heartless as this might sound, most were expecting Ambrose to take a much more severe beating than he actually did. Roman Reigns and The Undertaker took far greater punishment from Lesnar in their matches with The Beast in 2015.

Dean will still have gotten a boost from this match, and it did give Lesnar a victory that he did actually need if he is to continue playing a major role in WWE going forward. And I was never expecting this to be as brutal as, say, Mick Foley vs. Edge at Mania 22. But overall, this needed a massive spot or some level of brutality or drama to be a big success. Perhaps it was because of the Hell In A Cell match later on, so this bout had a little less to work with. Whatever the case, this was still entertaining by all means, but it was probably the biggest let-down of the show when analysed as a whole.

Last point relating to this match: I am starting to get bothered by Lesnar's continuing messages in mainstream interviews that he is in wrestling purely for the money. That would be fine if a) Brock's character was money-motivated, b) if Lesnar or even Paul Heyman acknowledged this on-air regularly, and c) if Lesnar was a full-on heel. Since none of these apply, it only makes fans angry that Brock (who also didn't attend the Hall Of Fame ceremony) is receiving such a big push and so much money to essentially deliver a few suplexes and a couple of F5's on a part-time basis. He's great at what he does, no doubt, and he's definitely a special attraction. And of course, wrestling is a business, so Lesnar's stance can't be considered wrong. But it's still annoying to see someone who isn't really that interested in wrestling pushed so forcefully. Paul Heyman handles all of Lesnar's on-screen promos, and going forward it might be a good idea for him to handle all of his off-screen interviews too.

Prior to the next bout, we had the honouring of this year's Hall Of Fame inductees, introduced by Howard Finkel (the only man to appear in the arena at every single Mania). They were The Fabulous Freebirds, The Godfather, celebrity inductee Snoop Dogg, Big Boss Man (whose family accepted his induction), Jacqueline, Warrior Award winner Joan Lunden, Stan Hansen and star inductee Sting. Sting had officially retired at the HOF, but it was still possible that he would appear in another form later on (spoiler: he didn't). It was weird that WWE didn't acknowledge the seven Legacy inductees here, even in an on-screen graphic, especially considering that some of them were massive names during their eras (those inductees were Lou Thesz, Pat O Connor, Frank Gotch, George Hackenschmidt, Mildred Burke, 'Sailor' Art Thomas and Ed 'Strangler' Lewis).

Charlotte vs. Becky Lynch vs. Sasha Banks was up next, with Snoop coming out again to help provide a musical performance of Sasha's entrance music (Snoop and Sasha are cousins, by the way). This had the feel of a really big match, especially with the new (or reinstated) Women's Title going to the winner. All of the fans who had watched these women (and Bayley) put on the best WWE women's matches ever in NXT were hoping for something really special here. The three obliged: this was the best ever women's match on main-stage WWE TV.

The opening technical exchanges looked great; the pinfall attempts and counters looked smooth; the big dives (including a senton through the ropes by Sasha, a dive by Becky which took out Ric Flair at ringside and especially a top rope moonsault by Charlotte to her opponents at ringside) were awesome; the crowd responses to all three were loud and enthusiastic - this whole match was a big gem, and the required turning point for women's wrestling in WWE. After watching this match, you genuinely could see the women headlining WWE Pay-Per-View events in the future, perhaps sooner than people think.

A planned sunset flip by Sasha out of a top rope suplex by Becky didn't quite work out, and the spot-calling was a bit obvious later on, but otherwise this was tremendous. A double Natural Selection by Charlotte to her adversaries came close to getting the win, but closer still were the submission attempts by all three (the Figure-Eight by Charlotte, the DisArmHer by Becky and the Bank Statement by Lynch). It seemed that Sasha was destined to win, especially given her elaborate entrance. But as it turned out, Charlotte retained (or became new champion, depending on your point of view) by making Lynch submit to the Figure-8 whilst Slic Ric held Sasha back from ringside. A huge fireworks display afterwards for Charlotte solidified the establishment of women's wrestling as a major part of modern WWE.

This, to me, was probably the match of the night because it was everything that fans would have been hoping for. Considering that past female bouts at Mania would often involve Playboy, states of undress or a group of unrecognisable and, honestly, untalented "Divas", this was a milestone in women's wrestling history. The only question marks once again concern the result, as Sasha not becoming champion seemed like a huge mistake. Charlotte retaining isn't bad, by any means, and it definitely builds her heel heat. And no doubt, Sasha will become champion fairly soon. But I think that in the future, many will look back and say that Sasha really should have become champion at AT&T Stadium.

That brings us to the most anticipated match on the card: The Undertaker vs. Shane McMahon. I was glad that WWE didn't have this in the show-closing spot, partly because Shane probably shouldn't be actually main eventing a WrestleMania given his non-wrestler status and partly because it would have harmed Roman Reigns even more (more on him later). This was definitely the match that most were looking forward to most, though: if Shane won, he would have control of Raw and essentially WWE, but if Taker lost, he couldn't wrestle at Mania again (which essentially meant his career ending). Oh, and it was in Hell In A Cell. Someone remarked that the success of this show would hinge on how this match went. They were probably right.

Shane came out with his children doing his signature dance and with money raining from the ceiling; Taker came out to a typically extravagant presentation. Early on, it was clear that Taker would be in full control for much of the match, with Shane sneaking in offence as and when he could, but with his big moves and strikes needing to make an impact. The crowd was a little bit quiet, but they were definitely into the match. Taker drove Shane into the Cell cage a few times but there was no blood, which didn't surprise me since it's a PG era and with Shane's family on hand, the idea of him being turned into a bloody mess was even more unlikely. It was interesting that Taker looked more tired than Shane O Mac, but he was still in condition to keep going and hit his major spots like the Last Ride and a painful-looking Chokeslam onto steel stairs. Shane fought back, though, and after hitting a Coast-To-Coast with the stairs, he used bolt cutters to create a minor opening for one side of the Cell, which backfired when Taker drove Shane back-first into the Cell wall and it gave way onto one of the announcer's tables.

Image Source: DNA India
The battle continued at ringside, with Shane applying a sleeper on Taker in the crowd, only for UT to drop Shane onto and through an announcer's table as a counter. Shane fired back again with weapon shots, including the virtual explosion of a toolbox on Taker's skull. With Taker laid out on another announcer's table and with the ever-crazy Shane looking up at the Cell, you knew what was coming next. Even though Shane is now 46-years-old and the Cell cage is now more than 20 feet high, everyone knew that Shane was about to deliver a WrestleMania moment for the ages. Shane scaled the cage, looked out at the 100,000+ crowd, and delivered an absolutely insane elbow drop off the Cell, only for Taker to move (he probably would have been killed if he didn't) and Shane went right through the table! OH MY GOD!

With Shane virtually fighting for his life (fortunately he was okay in reality), Taker took the time to ponder why Shane would take such a crazy chance before bringing Shane back into the ring and with Shane telling Taker to keep bringing it, Undertaker drilled Shane with a Tombstone to finish him off. Taker left triumphantly, having taken his Mania record to 23-1 and having ensured he could continue battling at Mania in the future, while Shane was stretchered out on a moving cart, but not before giving fans a thumbs-up before saying farewell.

This was the spot-fest we all expected it to be, and Shane's elbow drop was an unforgettable Mania moment. It was strange that Vince McMahon didn't make his presence felt given that he has carried the entire feud, and I thought Shane could have had someone give him a minor piece of assistance at some point (I was expecting an Undertaker-Sting stare-down since their dream match will not be happening now). The crowd could have been a bit louder but given the huge running time (and there was still over an hour to go even after this match), fatigue was probably playing a role in the response. It wasn't by means a great wrestling match but to expect two men with a combined age of 97 to do that was unrealistic, especially since Shane is not an actual wrestler. It was a great spectacle, which is what it was presented as being, and considering all of the injuries and the initial disappointment that Shane was fighting Taker, plus the confusion over the storyline going into this match, I think the bout was definitely a success.

As for the result: as much as people might have wanted Shane to win, there was no way that Undertaker was losing. Considering his near-perfect Mania record, the thought of him losing to Shane was unfathomable (on any other night, it would have been a possibility), and once Taker's career was put at stake, it essentially confirmed the result because, when Undertaker finally retires, it will be the selling point of Mania as opposed to a throwaway stipulation. Many were rooting for Shane because of his promise for change, but let's remember that Shane McMahon the character had made those proclamations, not the real Shane. From a storyline point of view, things might have changed on-screen, but the real change will happen behind the scenes when Vince McMahon finally steps down. And since Shane was essentially the final option after injuries and other factors prevented certain people from facing Undertaker, it was unreasonable to imagine that Shane would pull off the win. I thought the match could have had more dramatic "will Shane win?" spots (the interference would have helped here), and it was begging for Vince involvement. Taker might strike Vince on Raw, leading McMahon to put Taker's career at jeopardy for real at WM 33, but with Shane out of the picture following his death-defying leap, Shane O Mac getting revenge on his dad is probably not going to happen anytime soon.

The last thing about this match is to give credit to Shane McMahon. Having left WWE for real in 2009, and been financially well-off for life and pursuing other business interests ever since, Shane had no reason to ever return to the company. And he certainly wasn't pressured to jump off a cage even taller than the one Mankind was thrown off in 1998. That he came back in the wake of WWE's injury crisis and took the chances that he did on the night, and looked nothing less than impressive and competitive throughout the well-executed HIAC match was a triumph to Shane as a performer and as a person, really. For all the talk of legacy beforehand, this ended up being the match that defined Shane's legacy. This wasn't the match of the year or anything, but it was definitely a memorable entry in WrestleMania history.

The Andre The Giant Memorial Battle Royal provided a few surprise entrants (Diamond Dallas Page, Baron Corbin from NXT, Tatanka - who most didn't notice come out, and who the announcers hilariously didn't even realise was in the ring until a few minutes in - and basketball legend Shaquille O'Neal) and was basically your standard multi-man match. Shaq and Show exchanged some minor spots before both were dumped out by most of the crew. From there, the rest of the match was basic, with Baron Corbin pulling off the shock win by last eliminating Kane, which indicates that Corbin will be playing a fairly significant role in WWE over the next few months.

This served its purpose by allowing the crowd to come down after the excitement of Taker vs. Shane, and added a bit extra with some shock entries and a surprise result. Incidentally, why was Baron Corbin chosen to come up and win this ahead of Finn Balor, Samoa Joe, Austin Aries etc? Probably because he's big. That's the Vince McMahon way. Look at the main event.

After a dance routine by the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, we finally got The Rock. Rock used a flame-thrower to light up a Rock logo and revealed to the audience the record-breaking attendance for WWE history here at Mania 32; a crowd of 101,763. It was obvious at this point that the crowd were really tired (I'm tired just writing this!); they clearly wanted to pop for Rock's catch phrases, but just didn't have the energy. Things perked up when Bray Wyatt, Erick Rowan and Braun Strowman interrupted Rock (the sight of so many flash-lights was amazing), and their interaction raised a few laughs (Wyatt calling Rock "Mr. Rock" was amusing, and some of Rock's lines were genuinely funny), before Rock surprisingly revealed that he had wrestling gear on and offered to have a match right there and then (which definitely woke up the Dallas crowd).

As it turned out, Rock's match lasted just six seconds and consisted of a Rock Bottom and a pin on Erick Rowan making it the shortest match in Mania history (hey, at least Rowan can say he fought Rock at WrestleMania). The Wyatts then planned to pummel Rock further, until they themselves were interrupted by John Cena's music, as the returning Cena got a legitimately huge babyface pop. The "John Cena Sucks!" chant-along and scattered boos aside, Cena got a full-on babyface reaction here as he and Rock teamed up to take out the Wyatts, and the two legends left together.

This was a fun segment, if slightly predictable once Rock was outnumbered for the second time. That Cena appears to be healthy is great news, and it was nice that he could appear at Mania in an active role. Rock wrestling, as brief as it was, was unexpected, and perhaps explains why his role hadn't been announced; had he made these intentions clear, the film producers for Baywatch (which he's currently filming) may have prevented it. The Wyatts took a bit of a knock here but sharing a Mania ring with Cena and Rock is hardly a bad thing. I do think that the Wyatts need to turn babyface, or Bray does at least, because their status as dangerous heels is virtually non-existent now, but on the whole they will probably look back at this experience as being a positive, if not now, perhaps in the future.

Finally, we came to the main event, pitting Triple H against Roman Reigns for the WWE World Heavyweight Title. This was the "oh, dear" match during the show; even during the fun segments, I was remembering that this was still to come. Not because it had the potential to suck, but because you just knew that Reigns was getting booed out of AT&T Stadium, and that the fan base was guaranteed to be offended regardless of the outcome. If you are unaware, WWE's push of Reigns and handling of his character have been - well - questionable, so the top babyface contender is receiving boos almost or possibly even more savage than those which greeted John Cena when he first became a top star in the mid-2000s.

HHH had an elaborate video entrance with an evil emperor-like Stephanie McMahon announcing the Authority's hatred for the audience. Reigns had his usual entrance with some pyro, but - yes - he was booed heavily. The match opened slowly with basic exchanges and submission holds by HHH, but as the minutes wore on, it was clear that HHH was being treated as the babyface and Reigns as the heel, not that this was a surprise. To be fair, some wondered if many fans would leave the stadium early, so repulsed were they by this main event match, so I suppose an interested crowd with undesired reactions is still better than that scenario.

HHH continued targeting Reign's shoulders with his submission offence and hit a nasty-looking neckbreaker off the one remaining announcer's table. Reigns fought back hard with some big moves, including a running clothesline off steel stairs at ringside and a Spear through a ringside barricade (some front row-seated fans were definitely giving a "Roman!" chant during the former spot). HHH survived a Spear, but only because Stephanie pulled the referee out of the ring. She then entered the ring herself, only to accidentally taste a brutal-looking Spear from Reigns in the most memorable spot of the match. HHH countered immediately with a Pedigree but it didn't get the job done. The almost unconscious Steph managed to pass her husband his trusty sledgehammer, but before he could use it, Reigns fired back with Superman Punches and a second Spear to win the match and the WWE Title. It should be noted that the three-count was genuinely met with a big cheer, but Roman's post-match celebrations were met with significant boos as a huge amount of fireworks went off inside and on the roof of AT&T Stadium to bring the show to an end, at long last.

I will risk the wrath of many fans by suggesting that Roman Reigns earned his moment here. Judging his career from the debut of The Shield at Survivor Series 2012 to this card here, few have done more and, more importantly, had to put up with more than Reigns has. Considering the injuries, who else could have featured in his spot here? Dean Ambrose, who I dare say is slightly overrated and aside from collisions with Seth Rollins, has had fewer memorable matches since the Shield split than Reigns has? AJ Styles, Kevin Owens or Sami Zayn, all of whom are relative newcomers to main-stage WWE TV? Or previously pushed and/or stale acts like Big Show and Sheamus? Let's face it, Roman Reigns is the only guy WWE could have pushed in that spot, and given what he has gone through, I dare say that he has earned this moment, and his opportunity to try and become WWE's next major star. We'll know over the next few weeks and months whether he can truly succeed as the guy, but it's harsh to say that he hasn't earned it, because he has.

And I thought that this was a fairly good main event. It wasn't a great match, but it was good, and I'm glad that the Dallas crowd didn't turn on the participants and ruin the match for the audience at home, like the Boston crowd did for Reigns vs. Sheamus at TLC. HHH put forth a worthy performance, though by no means his best at Mania. Also, for those complaining that HHH was in this spot, again who else could have been in this role? Lesnar losing to Reigns cleanly would have infuriated fans even more, and besides Kevin Owens (and him losing would have had an even worse reaction from hardcore fans), nobody else was available due to the injury situation. I was also surprised that Stephanie took a Spear; it definitely added something to this main event.

So, how to judge WrestleMania 32 on the whole? It's hard really, because most Manias are memorable either for the matches or for the moments. This show provided both, so theoretically it sounds amazing, but the results of quite a few matches dragged it down a bit.

Beginning with the bouts themselves: the women's match was probably the show-stealer, and AJ vs. Y2J was also really good. The Ladder match was superior to last year's effort, and HIAC was a great spectacle. The main event was adequate but nothing more than that, the Battle Royal and New Day vs. LON were card-fillers essentially, and Lesnar vs. Ambrose was sadly a disappointment. The pre-show matches were decent, but they largely existed to warm the crowd up. There were no classic match of the year contenders, but the best way to describe the in-ring action at Mania on the whole is good, but not great. Charlotte, Sasha and Becky will be the performers leaving WrestleMania having most enhanced their careers from an in-ring performance aspect.

Then, there's the moments: Austin, Foley and Michaels teaming up was nostalgic fun, and Rock and Cena joining forces was also a nice touch. Predictably, Roman's coronation was not the bang that WWE hoped to end Mania with, but the resurrection of the Women's Title, the appearance by Shaq (in an unexpected celebrity cameo after we saw Ronda Rousey last year) and some of the more elaborate entrances (especially New Day) more than made up for that. Some will be angry that a lot of young talent were on hand to make legends look good, which is fair comment; the hope is that they themselves will get the chance to create Mania moments for themselves in the future, as opposed to being crash dummies for those involving other icons. But the most memorable moment of WM 32 has to be Shane McMahon's insane dive off the Hell In A Cell cage, which given the distance that he fell and the location of said stunt ensures that this will be replayed for many years to come.

Although we had more than enough legend appearances, it still felt like we were missing one or two, or at least, that certain matches (especially HIAC) were lacking that extra something. Sting should have confronted Undertaker in some fashion. Someone totally unexpected like Goldberg or Kurt Angle would have gotten an almighty pop (I was half-expecting CM Punk, for some reason; just imagine if he confronted Stone Cold during a promo or something). The retro stars who did come out to play were more than welcome and were very well-received, but perhaps because we knew they would be there, it didn't have the zing that similar moments have had in the past (such as the nWo and DX reunions at Mania 31). Though he isn't a retro star in this context, the fact that Vince McMahon didn't appear in any form for HIAC was baffling, too.

And let's not forget the live attendance. After almost three decades of WrestleMania III being the largest attendance figure in WWE history, it has finally been topped here with 101,763 at Mania 32. The location itself looked superb, too, so I think that WWE will definitely be returning to AT&T Stadium in the future, perhaps closer to WM 40. Whatever the case, the once-unimaginable prospect of WWE breaking the attendance record at WM III has finally happened. Now that this has finally been achieved, has Vince McMahon reached the point where he has nothing left to attain as WWE Chairman?

Finally, there's the results, which were probably the downer of the evening. Manias always have questionable booking decisions, but of the eight (or nine, counting Rock's bout) matches on the main card, almost every single one had a debatable outcome. AJ Styles losing was daft. New Day getting beat was strange but less crucial, since the WWE Tag Team Titles weren't at stake. Sasha Banks not becoming Women's Champion was a real head-scratcher. And while Zack Ryder's win was a feel-good moment, it wasn't welcomed by all fans who see Ryder as someone who had his chance a few years ago, and won't contribute much going forward. I fully expected wins for Reigns, Undertaker and Lesnar, although some will complain about those results too. Realistically, the opposite outcomes for all three were never going to happen, so qualms about these are futile. The Battle Royal result was possibly the only one for which the audience could probably completely agree was the right, or at least an agreeable, outcome. When Road Dogg tells fans on Twitter that wins and losses don't matter, well they certainly do at WrestleMania.

Oh, and then there's the running time. A five-hour Mania with a two-hour Kick-Off Show that included three matches was a tough ask from an audience which is tired enough from weekly three-hour episodes of Raw. However, whilst it would have been nice to have been warned about this (WWE said Mania coverage would last seven hours but most took that to including a one-hour post-show, not one extra hour of WrestleMania), it definitely made the event seem extra-special. It had the feel of an extended rock festival, with absolutely everybody of note getting some form of attention, and quite a few major names from the past being on hand too. It also ends the idea of matches being shortened or dropped from the show to make time (Rock vs. Rowan was short by design); going forward, the talent has a greater opportunity to deliver that career-defining Mania moment because, thanks to the Network, WM could theoretically last all day if WWE was that way inclined. I am looking at attending WrestleMania 33 in Orlando next year, so I will definitely bear in mind that it could be a long night under the Florida sun, but nevertheless while the crowd was undoubtedly flagging towards the end, I hope that WWE holds long WrestleManias in years to come, because it made WM 32 feel that extra bit special.

Whether you loved WrestleMania 32 or not depends on your stance as a fan. If you are a pure fan of wrestling, then you will be arguing that it was inferior, perhaps vastly so, to NXT: Takeover Dallas. If you are a hardcore fan who despises Reigns and loves the indie veterans, then you probably found the booking here to be very frustrating. If you are a fan of the big moments, then you were probably satisfied by what went down in AT&T Stadium. And if you are a casual fan who watches Mania once a year and not much other wrestling, then you probably had a whale of a time. WM 32 definitely had something for everyone, and provided plenty of talking points, some of which stem from other aspects of the weekend (which I will outline in an upcoming story on the entire WrestleMania weekend). And, considering the injuries and other situations (Hulk Hogan remains blackballed for, erm, reasons) which decimated the line-up so many times over the last twelve months, it's close to a miracle that WWE presented a show which was worthy of the WrestleMania occasion.

This wasn't one of the greatest WrestleManias ever, but it was probably a top ten Mania. With some great action, legendary cameos, big moments, shock results and an important if undesired main event outcome, combined with being a milestone night for the women and the all-time attendance record for WWE being broken, WrestleMania 32 will go down as one of WWE's most significant cards. It wasn't quite the all-time classic show we were hoping for, it was perhaps inferior to the last few Manias, and quite a few results dragged it down a peg or two, but whether it was the matches, the stunts or the moments, you probably gleaned a good amount of entertainment from WrestleMania 32.

Now, the road to WrestleMania 33 begins!

Overall Rating: 8/10 - Very Good

Friday, 1 April 2016

WrestleMania 32 Predictions

Image Source: ProWrestling.com
Written By: Mark Armstrong

Having looked at the road to WrestleMania 32 a few days ago, I will now provide my predictions for all of the matches this Sunday at AT&T Stadium.

Before beginning with the bouts, I'll speculate on the potential involvement by legends and/or injured stars. The Rock is confirmed to be on hand, which I see most likely being as part of a talking segment with Steve Austin. I can also see Mick Foley being part of this to deliver a feel-good moment for the fans (albeit one not quite as memorable as the Austin-Rock-Hulk Hogan interaction at WM XXX). As for other stars, I can say Seth Rollins popping up in a backstage moment, and Shawn Michaels will probably appear at some point, although the Texas location means that Shawn will have to favour a babyface if his involvement is to leave the desired impact.

With that out of the way, let's get to the matches, beginning with the three Kick-Off Show bouts.

Kick-Off

1. The Usos vs. The Dudley Boyz

I was hoping that this should be a tables match, but it looks like it'll remain a regular tag team match. This should be a really good start to the night's action, and an underrated first-time meeting between two of WWE's top tag teams. I think The Usos will win this match, but that the feud will continue beyond Mania, which could lead to a Tables rematch at a later date (then again, most expected the same during the Dudleyz-New Day feud in autumn 2015).

Prediction: The Usos

2. Brie Bella, Alicia Fox, Paige, Natalya and Eva Marie vs. Lana, Emma, Naomi, Tamina and Summer Rae

Team Bella will win, with the about-to-retire Brie Bella making Lana submit to the Yes Lock after a fairly short match. Nothing else to say for this, really. I tried to think of something else to discuss here but I can't, unless you wonder aloud why WWE thought the hateable Eva Marie would receive a babyface reaction when she was revealed to be a part of this match.

Prediction: Team Bella

3. Kalisto vs. Ryback (United States Championship)

Kalisto vs. Ryback has so little energy to it that one can understand why it is now on the Kick-Off show. I can see Kalisto retaining here in another upset win over The Big Guy, but I'm thinking it's more likely that Ryback wins here, possibly to drop the U.S. Title straight away to an NXT call-up (Finn Balor or Samoa Joe?). It'll be a decent match, but nothing memorable (which must be annoying to Kalisto after his show-stealing performance back at TLC).

Prediction: Ryback

Main Show

1. The New Day vs. The League Of Nations

Onto the main card now: The New Day will defeat The League Of Nations. The LON have nowhere near as much momentum or popularity as New Day, who have just turned babyface after months of being cheered by many crowds. The match should be decent, but it may be more notable for the entrances (I anticipate a grand, unicorn-and-trombone-themed entrance for New Day). There isn't really much else for me to say about this; New Day will win, and will probably be given fresh opposition on Raw the following night (possibly Enzo Amore and Big Cass?).

Prediction: The New Day

2. Andre The Giant Memorial Battle Royal

This has now been moved to the main card, which suggests that something fairly momentous could happen. This could be through a main roster debut, a returning legend or simply the beginning of a major push for an existing star.

I'm going for the latter and picking Braun Strowman, or Bray Wyatt if he's entered (and where are The Wyatt Family on the Mania card anyway?). One could suggest just about anything from the standpoint of an NXT name debuting or an old favourite appearing, so I'll take the safe route and pick someone currently in the fold. Based on those already entered and the names who strangely don't have a match scheduled, I'm picking either Braun or Bray to win. And if I had to pick one, I'll go for the newer face and pick Braun.

Prediction: Braun Strowman

3. Chris Jericho vs. AJ Styles

There's only one logical outcome here, and that's AJ beating Y2J. It would bring a smooth end to the feud, and give recent signing Styles enough of a boost to progress up the card in some fashion. Besides, he's making his Mania debut and is still relatively new to WWE. It would be a pointless booking decision to have Jericho win here, especially since Y2J's current run in WWE will be ending soon.

If they get 15-20 minutes, both men have the opportunity to put on a really good match. We've already had three thrilling bouts so far, each one better than the last, so the hope is that both well-travelled, experienced and talented veterans will put on a Mania match for the ages in Dallas. That depends on how much time they're allotted, but this has the potential to be the match of the night, if not a contender for Match Of The Year.

Prediction: AJ Styles

4. Intercontinental Championship Ladder Match

This should be a similar spot-fest to last year, perhaps slightly better given that this is the Mania debut for Kevin Owens and Sami Zayn (both of whom will be determined to leave a lasting impression), and gives Zack Ryder what is probably his last major appearance on a WWE card (especially since he's only involved as a replacement for Neville). A Pop-Up Powerbomb off a ladder by Owens seems possible, but other than that it's hard to predict what the major spots will be here (which is good for a match that is supposed to be).

The result is a bit unpredictable too. Some see KO retaining the gold, others believe that Sami Zayn will triumph. Given his push over the last ten months, I'm choosing Owens to win here, with a view to him feuding with and losing the IC Title to Zayn at a later date.

Prediction: Kevin Owens

5. Charlotte vs. Sasha Banks vs. Becky Lynch (Divas Championship)

The three-way between Charlotte, Sasha Banks and Becky Lynch has the potential to be the greatest ever WWE women's match. If it lasts 15 minutes or more, I think that's what we'll get, since all three will be going all-out to make history and essentially complete the revolution of female wrestling in WWE. This one depends on time, at least when it comes to match quality.

As for the result: the slow-burning push of Sasha makes me think that she will be the one to win on Sunday. Becky Lynch is also very talented, but she hasn't quite got the momentum or the popularity of The Boss. I expect Sasha to win by making Lynch submit to the Bank Statement to become Divas Champion (although rumour has it that a new Women's Title will be unveiled on the post-Mania Raw) and heading into a feud with the supposedly-unbeaten former titleholder Charlotte from there, or if Charlotte and Becky concluded their storyline after WM, Sasha's first opponent for her newly-won title could be Bayley if she debuts on Raw the night after Mania.

Prediction: Sasha Banks

6. Dean Ambrose vs. Brock Lesnar (No Holds Barred Street Fight)

On the one hand, Brock Lesnar can't afford to lose again, having won so few matches of consequence since he lost the WWE Title at Mania 31. On the other hand, Ambrose has built up enough momentum that it would represent a squandered opportunity if he lost here and returned to his usual spot on the card.

I see Lesnar winning the match, but in a fashion that enhances Ambrose. If Dean is seen to take such a beating that it builds sympathy for his character and, more importantly, has fans rooting for him to pull off an unlikely win, then this match should be a tremendous success even if Brock wins. The main thing is for this match to benefit Ambrose, and since the chances of him beating Lesnar are slim, then a never-say-die performance to rival Steve Austin against Bret Hart at WM 13 is probably the way that WWE will go.

Perhaps of greater interest is how violent this match will get. Since WWE went PG, the use of genuinely dangerous weapons and the use of heavy blood loss have been eliminated, yet recent weeks have the match hinting at Ambrose using a crowbar, a barbed wire baseball bat and even a chainsaw. Most likely, there may be some minor blood from some harder-than-expected blows, and Ambrose might get in one shot to the back with "Barbie", but those expecting something along the lines of Edge vs. Mick Foley from Mania 22 might be disappointed. It'll still be a great brawl, though, and a contender to steal the show in Dallas.

Prediction: Brock Lesnar

7. The Undertaker vs. Shane McMahon (Hell In A Cell Match; Career vs. Control of WWE)

Undertaker vs. Shane is the most intriguing match of the night. If Shane wins, he takes control of Raw and has promised mass changes (that didn't happen when he temporarily managed Raw in late 2008 but I guess we're not supposed to remember that), meaning that many fans want him to win. However, even with The Streak no longer a factor, fans still do not want to see Taker lose, especially with the added stipulation that Undertaker's career is essentially over if he does taste defeat and go 22-2 at Mania.

The build-up and storytelling has been hit-and-miss, and there remains some confusion at the idea that we could accept non-wrestler Shane as an opponent for Taker, but there is still more good than bad within this set-up, especially when it comes to the match itself.

It will feature little wrestling but include plenty of standout spots and diversions, all of which should create a very entertaining atmosphere. The inevitable use of the Hell In A Cell cage and likely use of weapons will disguise the limitations of both (Taker has just turned 51, don't forget), as will the guaranteed involvement of Vince McMahon.

I anticipate Shane taking such a beating that UT will relent to Vince's chagrin, which will give Shane O Mac a way back in. He will still need assistance to truly gain the upper hand which may come from neglected stars who want the Authority gone (Dolph Ziggler?), legends with a reason to attack Taker (Shawn Michaels?) or even top names planting the seeds for a future showdown with Taker (John Cena?). Shane will bust out his signature spots, some of which will require the action to leave HIAC. I foresee Vince, Stephanie and even Linda getting involved towards the end, with Shane getting his shots in on Vince.

But in the end, I see Shane taking one chance too many by perhaps leaping from the Cell roof in the spot of the night, crashing and burning in some fashion, and Taker getting the win from there. I also see Taker attacking Vince post-match to reaffirm his babyface status.

Taker isn't losing because his career simply couldn't end at the hands of a non-wrestler. Plus, since Shane was WWE's last resort as a Mania opponent for Taker, I see Shane's involvement being a short-term thing. That being said, the match could perhaps be used to set up what will be Taker's genuine last match at Mania 33, most likely against John Cena or Sting (we can only hope), with that bout possibly being announced as soon as the post-WM episode of Raw.

Whatever happens, this will be entertaining and memorable, and will probably exceed expectations - but I still wouldn't expect anything other than an Undertaker win.

Prediction: The Undertaker

8. Triple H vs. Roman Reigns (WWE Championship Match)

Ten years ago at WrestleMania, John Cena defended the WWE Title against Triple H in a match preceded by almost venomous hatred towards Cena by the hardcore fans, despite him being the babyface and HHH being the heel. Many wondered whether Cena would turn heel that night and HHH go face, with Cena not leaving Mania as WWE Champion. As it turned out, Cena remained a face and successfully defeated HHH, and has been a babyface ever since. The half-cheers/half-boos reaction has almost constantly followed Cena since then, although it has not prevented him from becoming WWE's biggest star since the end of the Attitude Era. That being said, it has always been mystifying how WWE could seem satisfied that its supposedly-top good guy would be booed by so many fans nearly every week.

Which brings us to its modern-day counterpart, as Roman Reigns fills the Cena role and HHH's spot is taken by, erm, Triple H, except with The Game being the defending champion. Fans have been hating on Reigns since Royal Rumble 2015 up to Reigns' WWE Title bout against Brock Lesnar at Mania 31. The boos continued throughout 2015 on and off, but it seemed like Reigns had found a way to eliminate the boos at TLC 2015 and thereafter. But since this year's Royal Rumble, the problem has returned and has arguably been worse than ever; it seems like there's nothing that will get the majority of fans to cheer Reigns, especially a hardcore crowd at a show like WrestleMania.

This has led to speculation as to whether or not WWE should curtail Reigns' push by having him lose here, and/or turn heel. But whilst the reaction is obviously irksome to both Reigns and WWE, I believe that Reigns will still win this match, and that he should win the match, and even that he should remain a babyface. And here's why.

Primarily, it's because the boos are down to WWE rather than Reigns. It was WWE and not Reigns who chose to have him win the 2015 Rumble over Daniel Bryan. Bryan's retirement this year probably suggests that WWE did the right thing (the booking of the match was horrible, mind you). Reigns was kept away from the main event scene for much of 2015, which also seemed to be the correct decision to defuse some of the heat. It wasn't Roman's fault that so many performers have gone down with injuries which have made it almost impossible to find anyone other than Reigns to main event Mania 32. It also wasn't Reigns who decided that the only other viable contenders, Brock Lesnar and Dean Ambrose, would not be involved in the title scene, nor that HHH was effectively the only remaining heel to defend the title against Roman.

What's more, Reigns has had some of the best Pay-Per-View matches of the last 12 months in WWE. And he did earn the cheers with his more aggressive displays in December 2015 and into January 2016. Let's also not forget that whilst the hardcore fan bases boo Reigns, the majority of audiences do still give Reigns the desired cheers (and why did WWE decide to hold the pre-Mania editions of Raw in towns where Reigns was guaranteed to be booed). Finally, it is WWE who controls Reigns' character, from his continuous use of Shield-related spots to his promo content to his unexplained or illogical absences between and during major matches.

On the road to WM 31, fans partly rejected Reigns because they felt that he hadn't earned the spot. Yet, over the last year, Reigns couldn't have done much more given the PG restrictions on talent, but this still hasn't been enough to satisfy fans. Had WWE fast-tracked Kevin Owens or AJ Styles into Roman's spot, those same fans would have been hypocritical to accept them wholeheartedly considering that Owens and Styles only arrived in WWE in late 2014 and early 2016 respectively.

This isn't to suggest that Reigns is perfect by any means, nor that fans should just accept whatever WWE gives them. And WWE has definitely mishandled Roman's character. But it seems that many fans don't know what they want anymore. Unless a wrestler has competed extensively on the independent circuit and/or doesn't resemble the bodybuilder type famously favoured by Vince McMahon, it seems that fans are inclined to reject them. Look at Sheamus, look at Ryback, look at Batista (circa 2014). Conversely, the CM Punks, Daniel Bryans and Dean Ambroses receive almost endless support, which they have earned because of their talent, but it does seem like fans are deliberately rejecting some performers for reasons unrelated to their skill sets, which really shouldn't be happening. And even then, it is not enough for some fans, as evidenced by the disrespect shown by Brooklyn fans to the Raw six-man tag featuring such hardcore heroes as Kevin Owens, Dolph Ziggler and Sami Zayn.

Therefore, although the boos are a heavy distraction, one can understand why WWE chooses to ignore them and stick to its plans. If fans provide Reigns and HHH with the opportunity to do so, it is entirely possible that they can deliver a really exciting brawl which would be a worthy way of crowning Roman as WWE's new top dog. Interference is possible, although WWE would have to be careful who it chooses to get involved (e.g. Shawn Michaels is guaranteed a babyface pop in his home state of Texas, so him helping HHH might only cause even louder boos towards Reigns). Either way, performance-wise this should be a good main event with the logical outcome of Reigns winning, but the fans could create a situation whereby Mania ends on a low note.

The only way around this is a double turn, but given what I have outlined above, I do not see it happening because Reigns has been pushed too hard for WWE to change course now. I can see Reigns turning heel in late 2016/early 2017 depending on how future reactions pan out, with a view to another, and hopefully more successful, babyface turn for Roman a year or two after that.

It may not be what fans want to see, but the only outcome I can see is Roman cleanly pinning HHH to become WWE Champion and remaining a babyface. And I do feel that Reigns has at least earned the opportunity to sink or swim as a long-term titleholder (he's done more than John Cena and Batista did prior to their first title wins in 2005). It's hoped that the match can be good enough to overcome what's bound to be a loud and negative crowd reaction in AT&T Stadium. The other hope is that WWE tweaks Roman's persona after or even at Mania so that he has a genuine chance of becoming as big a star as Cena did. A year from now, as WrestleMania 33 approaches, we'll know for sure how the Roman Reigns experiment truly worked out, since nobody can say for sure until he's given the hot seat for the long run.

Prediction: Roman Reigns

So, WrestleMania 32 is bound to be a memorable, entertaining and intriguing night of action. WWE is hoping that this will be a milestone Mania, one which will help to define the current era. The performances should live up to the standard set by previous Manias, the possibility of big surprises or major moments should also enhance the show, and the results will determine the path that WWE will be heading in the weeks, months and maybe even years to come.

Despite the negativity surrounding some feuds, matches or pushes, WM 32 will still be the biggest show of 2016, and let's not forget how much of a success Mania 31 was after a very lacklustre build-up. It may not be quite the show that Vince McMahon envisioned when he first announced that the 100,000+ seater AT&T Stadium would host the event, but WrestleMania 32 is bound to be unforgettable, hopefully for the right reasons.

Monday, 28 March 2016

The (Bumpy) Road To WrestleMania 32

Image Source: ProWrestling.com
Written By: Mark Armstrong

For wrestling fans, it must feel like Christmas Eve right now. That's because we are now only a matter of days away from WrestleMania 32, the biggest wrestling event of the year and possibly the biggest event in WWE history, at least based on the potential live attendance. Later this week, I will make my predictions for Mania match results but, for now, I am going to look back at an unforgettable and at many times undesirable lead-in to WrestleMania 32.

Rumours have been going back years that WWE wanted to hold Mania at AT&T Stadium in Dallas, Texas due to its 100,000+ capacity. In November 2013 (yes, it was that long ago), it was leaked that the 2016 WM would emanate from AT&T Stadium. Once it was officially confirmed in early 2015, both fans and WWE began considering possible mega matches to justify the biggest crowd in WWE history by presenting the company's biggest and best show, well, ever.

All sorts of incredible potential matches or dream scenarios were drawn up. We've heard rumours of Hulk Hogan vs. John Cena, Sting vs. The Undertaker and a Shield 3-way bout. We've heard that WWE was planning The Rock vs. Triple H, Ronda Rousey vs. Stephanie McMahon or a tag team combination of the two. Roman Reign's opponent has at various times ranged from Brock Lesnar to John Cena, who had also been linked with a match against The Undertaker (as was Lesnar before their feud ended at Hell In A Cell). HHH was also linked with Seth Rollins at one point. And let's not forget Steve Austin briefly (and accidentally) raising hopes of a comeback match against Lesnar, as well as the possibility of return bouts for Batista, Goldberg, Kurt Angle and even Shawn Michaels (all of which were hearsay). Whatever path WWE chose to head down, the final line-up would be worthy of the occasion.

But what nobody was expecting was for the Road To WrestleMania 32 to be filled with so many problems, to the extent that WWE has been described as cursed by some. Previous Manias have suffered from injuries to top stars resulting in their absence, such as Mania 2000 (Undertaker and Steve Austin shelved) and WM 23 (Triple H and Rey Mysterio out hurt). (WM 13 would be on this list if most didn't believe that Shawn Michaels "losing his smile" wasn't just a convenient excuse to avoid losing to Bret Hart at said Mania.) However, nothing compares to the frightening injury jinx over the last few months. Randy Orton, Seth Rollins and John Cena were all shelved with long-term injuries. Daniel Bryan had to retire in February due to injury, and rumour has it that the also-shelved Sting will announce his retirement as well at the Hall Of Fame ceremony. Add to that injuries to Cesaro, Neville, Nikki Bella, Tyson Kidd and others (Luke Harper was injured in a post-Raw dark match less than two weeks before the big event), and you have to wonder what has caused so many performers to suffer serious physical problems all at the same time. Whatever the reason, injuries have torn up the proposed Mania card on many occasions.

Making matters worse, it hasn't just been injuries which have caused upheaval to Mania 32. Film commitments meant that neither Ronda nor Rock could wrestle (Rock will still be on hand at Mania 32, as I will explain). Austin made it clear that while he is open to an appearance, he is simply not willing to wrestle again (and who can blame him at age 51 with previous neck issues, especially if pitted against "The Mayor Of Suplex City" Brock Lesnar?). And Hulk Hogan extinguished hopes of a farewell match after the racism scandal which saw him leave WWE in July 2015. Hogan's recent nine-figure courtroom victory over Gawker (who published Hogan's sex tape containing the racist lines) could open the door to an eventual WWE return, but even if he were to resurface, there's virtually no chance that a 62-year-old with a back that's totally gone would be cleared to wrestle anyway. And we've even lost some legends in the form of Dusty Rhodes and Roddy Piper (the latter of whom may have hosted a special edition of Piper's Pit), and other icons are going through their own trials and tribulations, such as Bret Hart who is currently recovering from treatment for prostate cancer.

So, the fact that WWE has booked a respectable card for WrestleMania is something of a triumph. It may be a show consisting of some filler matches and others which have imported names from the past or are being booked in the face of fan adversity, but under the circumstances WWE honestly couldn't have done much better. And whilst it is far from the dream card that most envisioned last summer before all of the problems began for WWE, it should still be a night to remember at AT&T Stadium.

Having addressed the elephant in the room (the injuries and other issues plaguing WWE), it's now time to preview the matches themselves but, just before we get to that, it's worth discussing the potential non-wrestling appearances. The Rock announced months ago that he will appear in some form or fashion at Mania, but we still don't know what that will be. That might be a good thing since it gives Rock the opportunity to surprise people on the night, but it still feels weird. Methinks that Rock will be involved in a talking segment with one or more legends; based on the rumoured or likely names to attend, this could range from a Rock 'N' Sock Connection reunion with Mick Foley to a(nother) face-to-face promo with Steve Austin to an unexpected verbal showdown opposite Shawn Michaels. Perhaps John Cena will make a non-wrestling return while recovering from injury to exchange barbs with Rock. Or might Rock's involvement lead to that most entirely unexpected of occurrences, a Hulk Hogan return?

One thing is for sure: several big-name legends (those above and possibly others) will be there, and their cameos will probably be amongst the highlights of the night. It isn't quite what WWE hoped for when initially planning possible matches for Mania 32 last summer involving its former icons, nor will their participation on Sunday likely provoke the same excitement as the Hogan-Austin-Rock opening promo at Mania XXX - but it's better than nothing. Incidentally, whilst Batista and Shawn Michaels were both allegedly offered special guest referee roles and turned them down, I am unsure as to why WWE hasn't inserted another legend into that role for one of its top matches, unless of course it has something bigger planned for its former Mania headliners.

Sting will definitely be at Mania as he is this year's star inductee into the Hall Of Fame. Also being inducted are The Godfather, The Fabulous Freebirds, Big Boss Man, Jacqueline, Stan Hansen, Joan Lunden (Warrior award winner, and a breast cancer survivor) and Snoop Dogg (celebrity inductee). It isn't exactly the strongest HOF line-up ever, but people said that last year and the 2015 ceremony was thoroughly entertaining. As stated, there are whispers that Sting will address his future at the ceremony and/or at Mania, by likely announcing his retirement. If for some reason his induction DOESN'T spell the end of his in-ring career, expect him to have one final match at Mania 33 in 2017. And if WWE doesn't choose The Undertaker to be Sting's opponent for that match (if it were to happen), then they have truly lost their minds.

Back to WM 32, then, beginning with the pre-show bouts: once again, the Andre The Giant Memorial Battle Royal will be held on the Kick-Off show. In contrast to the original bout which was designed to honour Andre's memory, the use of the match this year and last as a warm-up for the crowd, and the virtual lack of build-up for this year's incarnation, make it a match with very little reason to exist. Even the winner has nothing to gain, really; in the long-run, winning the ATGMBR did nothing for 2014 victors Cesaro and Big Show. It will be a way to get the Dallas crowd ready for Mania, which is good, but I think that WWE should drop the match next year or even revert to its previously unannounced dark match battle royal; at least that way, a legend's name isn't being used with minimal purpose.

Also moved to the Kick-Off show is The Usos vs. The Dudleyz. This began in February when Bubba Ray and D-Von unexpectedly turned heel on Jimmy and Jey, and having since denounced their use of tables (despite villainously teasing use of the wood at various points; that sounds dirty, I know). I was looking forward to seeing both teams get a chance to have a good match on the main card, so it's disappointing that these four are now on the KO preview event. It should still be fun to watch, especially if a Tables stipulation is added, but all four must feel slighted at the positioning of this bout on the card, especially The Usos who are about to compete in their FIFTH Mania preview match without having ever appeared on the actual PPV. The Usos may also be frustrated that the hate towards Roman Reigns has been passed onto his cousins, as The Usos are now occasionally receiving boos and hearing claims that they suck, despite having been one of WWE's very best teams since their 2010 arrival.

Also rumoured for the pre-show is a 10-Diva tag match. There isn't much to say about this one other than at least it gives most of the female roster a Mania pay-day outside of the Divas Title match, especially for Brie Bella whose retirement is said to be imminent. There has been a mini-feud to set this up, although much of it has taken place on Main Event (which, I'll be honest, I don't watch), so I can't comment a lot about it. It's a spot for them, I suppose.

Three matches in, and only now will the actual WrestleMania 32 event begin! Well, after Fifth Harmony perform America The Beautiful, anyway. The New Day should kick off the in-ring portion of Mania on a high, with rumours of an extravagant entrance (the trio HAS to enter via a trombone band, surely). Their opponents The League Of Nations have built momentum in recent weeks, making this handicap match more appealing than when it was first hinted at back at Fast Lane. WWE doesn't seem to have decided whether this handicap match will be for the WWE Tag Team Titles or not, although I think it wouldn't be a smart decision to dethrone New Day so soon after their long-awaited babyface turn. As an opener (which I think it will be, and should be), it'll be fine, but I wouldn't expect anything too memorable outside of ring entrances from this one.

Kalisto vs. Ryback is a card-filler. Simple as that. Kalisto is an exciting performer and a good choice to hold the United States Title, but Ryback is such a completely different type of opponent in a their-styles-don't-mesh-well kind of way that I can't understand why this match is happening at all. That Ryback is only a semi-heel hasn't really helped; the match has no heat, and I can't see many people watching WM on the WWE Network to see this one. Plus, flying in the face of the "bigger is better" theme of this match, didn't Kalisto, like, pin Ryback last November in a big upset on SmackDown? It's a way to get both men on the card, but nothing more. It probably isn't a good sign that this is the fourth (or possibly fifth) match which could be moved to the Kick-Off show with no major complaints.

Although Ladder matches rarely disappoint, it was a slight let-down when a Ladder bout was confirmed for Kevin Owens' Intercontinental Title at Mania, largely because it's a blatant rehash of the same stipulation last year with an inferior cast. It's obvious that the United States Title bout should have been the Ladder match and that KO is the one who should have defended his prize in singles action (against Sami Zayn, most likely). An Owens vs. Zayn feud is still probably going to happen after Mania, but as of right now this unfortunately feels like a card-filler. The good news is that everyone involved will be going all-out to try and kick off Mania with a bang (it's almost certain to be the first match on the main card), so despite the odd feel of the match, it's entirely possible that this year's multi-man Ladder showcase could eclipse the opener to WM 31, and it should be one of the best matches at AT&T Stadium on Sunday.

The Divas three-way between Charlotte, Sasha Banks and Becky Lynch has had the best build-up, partly because WWE was right to do what many fans were angry about months ago; saving Sasha until WrestleMania season before giving The Boss a Divas Title shot, while also continuing the feud between Charlotte and Becky. All three women have the chance to deliver the best female match ever on main-stage WWE television if given suitable time, marking the apex of a revolution in women's wrestling which began on NXT, despite what some people on Raw and SmackDown will tell you. It shows how much women's wrestling has evolved that this match could genuinely steal the show on April 3. This also seems to be the only match-up completely unaffected by the injury crisis (Nikki's neck issues had no bearing on this bout), and one which in hindsight has had a build-up stretching back to the debut of all three women on Raw last July.

Chris Jericho vs. AJ Styles is the fourth meeting of their feud, but the first since Y2J turned heel on AJ. Rather than slowly building to a first-time meeting at Mania, we got their initial match on Raw, a rematch on SmackDown and a decider at Fast Lane, before Y2J going heel meant one final battle in AT&T Stadium. Some have speculated whether this was the best option for Styles at his first WrestleMania. I personally don't think it's a bad position for AJ to be in, and if they are given 20 minutes or more, these two could give us a Match Of The Year contender at Mania. Fans will probably be more than satisfied with this bout, assuming that Styles is victorious (it will be 2016's answer to Sting losing to HHH at WM 31 if he isn't).

Brock Lesnar's Mania opponent has undergone all sorts of changes. At one point, we expected a Lesnar vs. Reigns rematch, interrupted by speculation that the final Lesnar-Undertaker showdown would be saved for April 3 instead. Once neither bout became a likelihood, there was mild speculation that Sheamus might be mega-pushed for Brock to steamroll through, before the events at Royal Rumble foreshadowed Brock vs. Bray Wyatt. But on Raw the night after Fast Lane, it was finally announced that Lesnar, somewhat out of the blue, would be facing Dean Ambrose in a No Holds Barred Street Fight (one of those sub-titles would have sufficed).

Why are we getting Ambrose-Lesnar? Well, WWE is rewarding Dean for his great efforts in getting even more over during the build-up to Fast Lane, which succeeded so much that many believed he should have defeated HHH for the WWE Title at Roadblock. That should be remembered next time WWE is accused of sabotaging a wrestler from entering the main event club. That being said, Wyatt vs. Lesnar had already been set up, leaving that story weirdly unresolved considering that Bray cost Brock the Royal Rumble match and, at the same time, the WWE Title. This is likely to be resumed after WM, but it still feels odd. Wyatt must be furious at this booking change.

Although Dean being granted this opportunity is a positive, Ambrose isn't quite on Lesnar's level, meaning that Brock's WM match feels a little bit anticlimactic. In addition, it's hard to believe that Brock will lose to Ambrose even in this environment (Lesnar's image has already been damaged throughout 2016 so far, so another loss at this point could destroy his image for good), but Dean's momentum would be halted if he doesn't win, especially if rumours of a Reigns-Ambrose feud after Mania are true. And whilst the prospect of Ambrose using a barbed wire baseball bat and a chainsaw, as handed to him by Mick Foley and Terry Funk, are both exciting, can one really expect a violent match like those held in the past in the PG world of WWE in 2016?

Not to be too negative, since many are looking forward to the match, but it does raise some eyebrows. Fortunately, it should be a great brawl, as it includes two strong workers and will be given plenty of time and a plethora of weapons, and the fan reactions to their interactions suggest a lively atmosphere when the match takes place. Some believe that the match could make Ambrose's career in the same way that Steve Austin became a true superstar from his WM 13 showdown with Bret Hart. Whatever happens, this is Ambrose's biggest match to date, and hopefully a springboard to even bigger and better things for come. As for Lesnar, the injury situation meant that he will have to be satisfied in a relatively big match for this event, although I believe that he would have been better served either concluding his feud with The Undertaker here instead of at Hell In A Cell, or entering the big cage as Vince McMahon's "instrument of destruction" against Shane McMahon. And that conveniently brings us to Taker vs. Shane.

The Undertaker vs. Shane McMahon is an intriguing clash in many ways, although it remains a head-scratcher at the same time. On the one hand, Taker needed a special opponent, and whilst a strong mid-carder could have filled that void, it simply could have felt like just another match, in the manner of Taker-Wyatt at Mania 31. For Undertaker's bout to stand out, it had to seem unique, and choosing Shane to face Taker definitely provided that. In addition, had a Kevin Owens or even a Dean Ambrose faced Taker, they almost certainly would have been defeated, which could have harmed their careers momentum-wise, something which wouldn't apply to Shane. Once Sting was injured and Cena followed him on the shelf (with Vince McMahon said to be devastated about the latter), the phone number entitled "Plan C" was dialled, and so Shane McMahon shockingly returned to Raw on February 22 to a huge ovation, in WWE's best moment of 2016 so far. Once the match was announced, though, my reaction was "Wow, Shane's going to fight Undertaker ... wait, SHANE's going to fight Undertaker?"

Yes, there are downsides to the match-up. Shane wasn't a main event-level talent even during the Attitude Era, and doesn't boast the name value of Vince (who is 70 now, admittedly). He's also a non-wrestler, making him a baffling portrayal of a threatening opponent for Undertaker. The addition of Hell In A Cell provides a chance to disguise Shane's weaknesses, although it makes the match feel like a second-rate version of UT vs. HHH inside HIAC from WM XXVIII. Most baffingly, though, is how Taker has essentially been inserted into this bout as Vince's representative with virtually no explanation whatsoever.

At the time, we were advised to wait as the storyline developed, with Taker's involvement explained and the potential for Shane to have a representative of his own. Instead, WWE hasn't explained anything, with both McMahon males describing Taker as "Vince's bitch". Taker is in the match because he's been told to, presumably, which is something that the Undertaker of old wouldn't have tolerated. Perhaps the pre-Mania Raw will finally shed some light, because Taker's role in the bout has created a story lacking a certain amount of logic, thus harming the anticipation for said match. Taker has made it clear that he isn't satisfied representing Vince, but surely he should have declined first only for Vince to then find a way to force him to fight?

That brings us to the stakes, which on the bright side do add to the intrigue. Shane is fighting because, if he wins, he gets control of Raw, which essentially means control of WWE (nice way to make SmackDown seem irrelevant). A loss for Shane prevents the mass change he has promised, including the ousting of the Authority (which some fans have mistaken for WWE promising genuine change, since Shane is still a WWE character in the world of kayfabe; those fans may be in for a disappointment). But now if Undertaker loses, his career is over (well, Vince said it'd be his last Mania which is effectively saying that). So, fans are torn between wanting Shane to win against all the odds and not wanting Taker to lose.

This has made the match result unpredictable, which should create a great atmosphere on the night. The HIAC structure promises some notable spots, one of which will probably see Shane (even at age 46 and in his first match since 2009) risking his wellbeing in a crazy fashion. It's also virtually guaranteed that there will be McMahon interference, and I suspect that some faces from the past will also be involved (Shawn Michaels and Mick Foley spring to mind, and possibly Steve Austin too). They'll need all the help they can get because, for a match likely to last 25-30 minutes, Undertaker vs. Shane definitely won't be a straight-up wrestling match.

I will discuss potential outcomes when I provide my predictions later this week, but needless to say, despite the plot holes, Taker vs. Shane will be a major reason why a lot of fans are going to watch WrestleMania. I will simply add that, in hindsight, WWE really should have saved the Taker-Brock Lesnar rubber match, also inside HIAC, for this Mania card, and they still could have had the McMahon involvement by having Vince and Shane manage one adversary with control of WWE at stake.

The November 9 Raw in Manchester, England proved to be the first step towards the WM 32 main event, with the WWE Title at stake, between Triple H and Roman Reigns. On paper, HHH vs. Reigns had a WrestleMania feel to it, being a first-time collision between a well-established top heel and the supposed next top babyface of the company. And the structure of the feud itself has largely been handled well, with key moments at Survivor Series, TLC and Royal Rumble before Reigns earned the title shot at Fast Lane (the way in which Roman was placed into that particular match was illogical, but that's another story). The heated brawls at TLC and on several episodes of Raw since Fast Lane would normally have fans excited about what could go down at Mania.

And yet it is a match that hardcore fans are dreading. Whilst Reigns was booed from Royal Rumble 2015-Mania 31 and throughout much of 2015, Roman seemed to have gotten over the worst of the negative reactions after TLC. But Reigns has been booed out of the building almost constantly from Royal Rumble onwards, peaking at Rumble when HHH eliminated him to wild cheers, and on the post-Fast Lane edition of Raw when HHH's brutal beatdown of Reigns resulted in a huge babyface reaction. HHH has been accused, once again, of using subtle tactics to have the fans cheering him despite the face-heel dynamic in this feud. Reigns is back to square one when it comes to audience reactions, having seemingly found a way to eliminate the jeers between TLC and Royal Rumble.

Certainly, WWE's creative team are to blame for fans being angry at Reigns' push and his character (moments like Reigns missing much of the Rumble match while his WWE Title was on the line have been the flaws in this rivalry). Incidentally, why are fans booing a guy for doing what he's been told to do? Although some may disagree, Reigns did feature in some of the most memorable PPV encounters in 2015, so we know the guy can wrestle to some degree. But the reasons for and against booing Reigns are to be addressed another time; the point is that he is being consistently booed now, and probably will be on Sunday. And then there's the predictability of the main event; namely, the inevitable outcome of Reigns vanquishing HHH to regain the WWE Title.

As a result, this is a match that fans are already writing off. The same applied to Reigns vs. Lesnar at WM 31, but on that occasion, Brock resigning with WWE boosted fan optimism in the bout, and WWE had a back-up plan with Seth Rollins and the Money In The Bank briefcase. Neither applies this time, and while HHH is a strong brawler, he isn't quite as intense as Lesnar. All of which means that we are approaching a WrestleMania main event which will either be ignored, jeered or feature crowd reactions contrary to those that WWE would like, with an outcome guaranteed to offend (even if HHH wins, fans will complain about him holding down talent once more, and a draw isn't feasible in this spot either). The match itself should be watchable, but after what happened at TLC when the Boston crowd refused to give Reigns and Sheamus a chance, will the entertainment factor of the bout be tarnished by the audience?

This is a predicament that WWE has found itself in for numerous reasons, but it's one that the company needs to find a way out of, and quickly. The most popular climax to Mania, ironically, would see Reigns turning heel and HHH perhaps going babyface, either after Reigns turns heel to win the title or as a reaction to losing this main event. But with all of the time that WWE has invested into Roman's big babyface push, that simply isn't going to happen.

It will be very interesting to see how WWE handles this match on the night. If Reigns is truly going to become the next major face of WWE, then surely the company can't just ignore the thunderous boos being aimed at Reigns week after week. We've already been through a decade-plus of that with John Cena; if another top babyface is consistently greeted by jeers, then people will be questioning WWE's sanity, if they haven't already. If they do decide to ignore the boos, then we are going to have another Mania top-liner that is memorable for the wrong reasons, something that won't seem right for what is meant to be WWE's biggest show in history. Something has got to give, and if it doesn't, then Mania could end on a bum note.

It's clear that WrestleMania 32 has been plagued by many problems, from scandals to injuries to retirements to awkward crowd reactions to questionable booking decisions. One can only wonder what WM 32 would provide had all of these issues not occurred; perhaps we'll find that out next year as WrestleMania 33 approaches. Nevertheless, WM 32 will still be the most memorable night of the year in WWE, and the card is guaranteed to provide plenty of talking points, and hopefully a huge amount of entertainment to rival the last few Manias. I personally am looking forward to the card, and I'll bet that once the show is over, we will be talking about another unforgettable Mania event.

I will provide my predictions for the entire card later this week, but hopefully for now you enjoyed this look at a very bumpy road to WrestleMania 32.