Figure Four Weekly: Recapping Elimination Chamber and the Reigns-Strowman decision

What had been expected for nearly a year became official on Sunday night as Brock Lesnar defending the Universal Championship against Roman Reigns was announced for WrestleMania 34.

Reigns defeated Braun Strowman, Seth Rollins, Finn Balor, John Cena, Elias, and The Miz in the main event of the Elimination Chamber pay-per-view to set up him challenging Lesnar at WrestleMania. The match came down to Reigns and Strowman, with Reigns finally putting him down with two spears.

But, both before and after they became the final two, the match was largely about Strowman. He kicked out of pretty much everything (including a spear earlier), eliminated all five other wrestlers, and stood tall after a post-match beatdown of Reigns. WWE tried to accomplish two things at once: put Reigns over Strowman clean and still have Strowman come out of it as strong as possible. In doing so, they limited the effectiveness of both of their goals.

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WWE Elimination Chamber live results, news & recap

Preview by Joseph Currier

Raw’s biggest remaining stop on the road to WrestleMania takes place tonight as the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada hosts Elimination Chamber.

We’re looking for your thoughts on tonight’s show, so you can leave a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to [email protected]

The show, which is the final Raw-exclusive pay-per-view, will feature two Elimination Chamber matches. The men’s match has Braun Strowman, Elias, John Cena, Roman Reigns, The Miz, Seth Rollins, and Finn Balor facing off for the right to challenge Brock Lesnar at WrestleMania. And the women’s match has Raw Women’s Champion Alexa Bliss defending her title against Sasha Banks, Bayley, Mickie James, Mandy Rose, and Sonya Deville.

A contract signing with Ronda Rousey is also scheduled. It will be Rousey’s second appearance since joining WWE.

Asuka vs. Nia Jax is set as well (with Jax getting added to the Raw Women’s title match at WrestleMania if she wins), Matt Hardy will face Bray Wyatt, and Titus O’Neil & Apollo will challenge for Cesaro & Sheamus’ Tag Team titles.

The pre-show has Luke Gallows & Karl Anderson taking on Curtis Axel & Bo Dallas. Our coverage begins with that match before the main card kicks off at 8 p.m. Eastern time.

**********

By Dave Meltzer

LUKE GALLOWS & KARL ANDERSON VS. CURTIS AXEL & BO DALLAS

Typical preshow match.  So-so match ending when Axel was pinned by Anderson after the magic killer. 

They cut right to The Revival after the match so it looks like they are back working with Gallows & Anderson.

WOMEN’S ELIMINATION CHAMBER MATCH FOR WOMEN’S TITLE:  ALEXA BLISS VS. SASHA BANKS VS. BAYLEY VS. SONYA DEVILLE VS. MANDY ROSE VS. MICKIE JAMES

Bliss retained the title.  They went almost 30:00 and it was fine, just a normal match but really long.  It definitely dragged early on but got better toward the end.  The biggest spot was James coming off the top of a pod with a Thesz press on Deville to pin her.  Banks probalby looked the best of anyone.  It opened with Bayley and Deville.  The eliminations were Banks beating Rose with the bank statement.  James pinned Deville with the Thesz press off the pod.  Bayley pinned James with the Bayley-to-belly.  Bliss pinned Bayley after La Magistral cradle.  And then Bliss pinned Banks after a draping DDT.

Renee Young interviewed Bliss.  Fans are chanting “You deserve it” and she said thiank you.  Heels in 2018.  Bliss said this was for every little girl or woman in the audience who ever dreamed big, this is for all of you.  This proves you can be whatever you want to be.  Dare to dream and dream big.  Then she said the reality is none of you will ever accomplish any of your dreams.  And then the fans cheered that.  She said the odds were against me and I still won.   

Braun Strowman did an interview saying he was going to win and make Brock Lesnar his pet beastie boy and win the chamber.

SHEAMUS & CESARO VS. TITUS O’NEIL & APOLLO FOR THE TAG TEAM TITLE

Sheamus & Cesaro won with a double-team white noise on Apollo after Cesaro chop blocked him.  Decent match.  

Andre the Giant HBO documentary trailer was shown.  

ASUKA VS. NIA JAX

Jax played monster most of the match.  Asuka won but hardly was put over.  Kind of kills the streak gimmick.  Jax threw her around the entire match and Asuka reversed a power bomb into a front rolling cradle.

Jax attacked her after the match and threw her out of the ring.  Ja totally no sold her offesne after the mtach and therw her intothe post.  She tackled her through the barricade.  That spot always gets over. 

Bliss did an interview and said “No one is ready for Alexa.”  The gimmick is that Jax hurt Asuka so Bliss will have an easier time with her.

Roman Reigns interview.  He said Paul Heyman works ten days a year and then waddles out.  Reigns said he’s going to Mania and beating Lesnar and winning the champoinship.

MATT HARDY VS. BRAY WYATT

This is the night of okay matches.  It was pretty much what you’d expect it to be.  Hardy got out of the Sister Abigail and Hardy hit the twist of fate for the pin.  The crowd was into the match at the end after crapping on it the entire way, paying no attention to a beach ball in the crowd and doing “Rusev Day” chants.

RONDA ROUSEY SEGMENT

It started with Kurt Angle, Stephanie and HHH coming out.  HHH looked tired.  HHH said he has scoured the world to get the elite athletes.  He said this was the best athlete signing since Kurt Angle.  HHH put her over like crazy.  He said she paved the way for young women athletes all over the globe and called her the baddest woman on the planet.  Rousey came out all smiles.  She didn’t get a big initial reaction but nobody booed.  Michael Cole put it over like it was a standing ovation.  She put over Angle winning an Olympic title.  Some fans booed her talking and they were drowned out by a big chant for her.  She seemed pretty relieved because you could see she was nervous.  She almost cried.  Then they showed Cain and DC chanting for her.  She tried to endear herself to the crowd by mentioning Roddy Piper.  She said he was the inspiration for her MMA career and coming here and said he wants to do him proud and I want to earn the fans’ respect.  HHH said she didn’t want anything special in the contract.  HHH said she wanted no special travel and no private cars.  They said she will be competing at Mania.  That got cheers.  HHH said she wouildn’t be in a championship match.  Rousey said she didn’t want to be given a title match.  She wanted to earn it.  She was about to sign when HHH and Angle were arguing in the background.  She noticed it.  She asked if Kurt wanted to say soemthing.  Kurt said he’s in awe of HHH and Stephanie, saying they’re brilliant.  Kurt said thehy’ve been talking about you as long as he’s been back.  Angle said they couldn’t wait to have you because they wanted to manipulate you for them what you did at WrestleMania 21, and then said 31.  He said HHH told himn this is three years in the making and now we own the bitch.  HHH told Kurt to shut up.  Said this isn’t about us.  Rousey started with her death stare at this point.  HHH said Kurt isn’t feeling well, he was hosptialized with the flu and is having a relapse and he’s going to get Kurt  to the doctor.  Stephanie did a great job of carrying this.  Stephanie said they have been talking about her since WM 31, you did embarrass us but you also impressed us.  Stephanie said you are one of the greatest fighters in the world and we’ve been wanting you.  Kurt said didn’t you tell me Ronda was a has-been and even you could take her.  Stephanie looked stunned.  Ronda had the death stare and went after Stephanie.  HHH came in and got in between them.  Ronda got in HHH’s face.  Rousey suplexed HHH through a table.  The crowd popped for that.  Stephanie freaked out and slapped her.  Stephanie got in her face.  Crowd was really hot for Ronda’s stare at Stephanie but Stephanie bailed out.  That was smart.  They shouldn’t touch now.  Rousey then signed the contract.

MEN’S CHAMBER MATCH:  THE MIZ VS.  BRAUN STROWMAN VS. JOHN CENA VS. ROMAN REIGNS VS. SETH ROLLINS VS. FINN BALOR VS. ELIAS

Elias came out and did his routine.  

Roman Reigns won the match pinning Strowman after two spears.  The story of the match was Strowman was a monster and actually pinned everyone with a powerslam.  He pinned Miz first, then Elias, then Cena, then Balor and finally Rollins. After the match, Strowman came back and powerslammed Reigns.  He gave him a second powerslam.  Then he threw him through a gimmicked pod.  Obviously this was the best match on the show, because it ws pretty much a one match and one angle show.  

Two tag team matches confirmed for WWE Elimination Chamber

WWE has confirmed the Raw Tag Team Championship match and announced the pre-show bout for Sunday’s Elimination Chamber pay-per-view.

As expected, Cesaro & Sheamus will defend their titles against Titus O’Neil & Apollo. The Titus Worldwide team defeated the champions in a non-title match on Raw this past Monday and then challenged them in a post-show video, but WWE didn’t officially announce the match until today.

O’Neil & Apollo have beaten Cesaro & Sheamus in three non-title matches this year, but Cesaro & Sheamus retained against them on the January 29th episode of Raw.

The pre-show will also feature Raw’s tag team division, with Luke Gallows & Karl Anderson set to face Curtis Axel & Bo Dallas. Gallows & Anderson had been feuding with The Revival in recent weeks.

With Axel & Dallas helping him out, The Miz eliminated Finn Balor in Monday’s gauntlet match.

The card for Sunday now has six confirmed matches. Here’s the lineup for the show:

  • Braun Strowman vs. John Cena vs. Elias vs. Roman Reigns vs. The Miz vs. Seth Rollins vs. Finn Balor in an Elimination Chamber match (winner challenges for Brock Lesnar’s Universal Championship at WrestleMania)
  • Ronda Rousey signing her Raw contract
  • Raw Women’s Champion Alexa Bliss defending against Sasha Banks, Bayley, Mickie James, Mandy Rose, and Sonya Deville in an Elimination Chamber match
  • Asuka vs. Nia Jax (Jax gets added to the Raw Women’s title match at WrestleMania if she wins)
  • Matt Hardy vs. Bray Wyatt
  • Raw Tag Team Champions Cesaro & Sheamus defending against Titus O’Neil & Apollo
  • Luke Gallows & Karl Anderson vs. Curtis Axel & Bo Dallas (pre-show)

WWE Elimination Chamber 2018 preview

Coming our way on the WWE Network from Las Vegas, NV, is Sunday’s WWE Elimination Chamber — the final Raw-only PPV on the road to WrestleMania that is built around two title matches and a contract signing.

The now seven-man Chamber match will decide who faces Universal Champion Brock Lesnar at Mania while the Raw women’s title will be on the line in the first-ever women’s Chamber match. However, the main attraction is former UFC women’s star Ronda Rousey signing her WWE Raw contract.

The four matches that have been booked for this show will shape the Raw side of the WrestleMania card. However, there seems to be a very high level of predictability with the outcomes that often happens on PPVs between the Royal Rumble and Mania. Here’s a look at how we arrived here and what’s at stake on Sunday.

“Woken” Matt Hardy vs. Bray Wyatt

If this program between these two is going to raise these guys to the next level, this is the match where it needs to happen. It all started back in November when Wyatt defeated Hardy in a Raw match which was the final straw to Hardy becoming “woken”. They had a three-minute throwaway match on the Raw 25 show, followed by both guys eliminating each other in the Royal Rumble match. You would expect this feud will not end here, but in order to keep people engaged, something needs to happen. Woken is definitely not Broken and before all is lost, Woken needs to wake up. 

Nia Jax vs. Asuka

The biggest threat to Asuka’s long undefeated streak is Jax. These two will meet in Las Vegas with the stipulation that if Jax wins, she will be added to the Raw women’s title match at Mania. Asuka beat Jax back in January when Nia was “unable to continue” while clenching her knee. I can’t imagine that this is going to be the end of the Asuka win streak.

Women’s Elimination Chamber: Raw Champion Alexa Bliss vs. Bayley vs. Mandy Rose vs. Mickie James vs. Sasha Banks vs. Sonya Deville

It’s the first-ever women’s Chamber match and the fact Bliss has to put her title on the line in a Chamber match but Brock Lesnar doesn’t was the basis of her calling Raw GM Kurt Angle sexist on a recent edition of the show.

As for the actual match itself, it is the big stage for Rose and Deville. The two unlikely callups from the NXT brand have a chance to prove that they belong on the main roster. On a weekly basis, Deville has come across as the most likely of the two to have a breakout night.

Banks has looked great as of late in matches with Asuka and Bayley. She looks to get back the title she has held several times but never successfully defended. The two most unlkely winners are Bayley, who has struggled for relevancy but looks to be back up on the rise, and James, who aided Bliss on Monday.

All signs point to Bliss somewhat getting out of Las Vegas with the title still in hand. 

Men’s Elimination Chamber: Roman Reigns vs. Elias vs. John Cena vs. Braun Strowman vs. Finn Balor vs. Seth Rollins vs. The Miz

After a nearly two-hour gauntlet match, the longest match in WWE history, that saw Seth Rollins grab all the headlines, one thing was certain: Reigns is definitely still winning this match. There are no signs that Vince McMahon & Co. are going to deviate from that plan. Kudos to the WWE for finding a new way to do the Chamber by getting one more person added to the match. This match will start with three guys like a triple threat instead of the standard two that have been in all other Chamber matches. 

After the injury to Dean Ambrose, Rollins was dying on the vine, stuck in a midcard program with Jason Jordan vs. The Bar over the Raw tag team titles. That all changed with Jordan’s injury and the marathon match this past Monday as Rollins is back to being a main event guy. The same can be said for Balor, who hasn’t done much since returning from injury. The first-ever Universal champion hasn’t been this close to the title since he held it for just 24 hours after winning it. Elias has been developing a great response to his version of “WWE”, but his matches haven’t been generating a ton of buzz. This is a chance for him to shine in the main event spot that probably belonged to Samoa Joe.

No one has looked better and more impressive than Strowman over the last several months. The crowd is into everything he does whether it’s his dropkicks, picking up vehicles, or destroying announcer tables. Strowman is the man the people love. This will be his first Chamber match and I look forward to what destruction he may cause (maybe a pod or two?). Since he isn’t winning, look for something big to happen to him where he still ends up looking like the man despite not being the one to win the match. If The Miz vs. Braun Strowman at Mania for the Intercontinental title is the plan, I look for these two do something special. We also hope to get an answer to what is next for Cena as well…or at least a nod toward that answer.

But we all know that it’s all about Roman Reigns at the end of the night.

Ronda Rousey signs her contract

By far, this is the moment I am looking the most forward to. Rousey is the most exciting thing the WWE has going on right now, and this moment is all about what is in store for her at WrestleMania. Will it be a title match? Will it be something with Stephanie McMahon & Triple H? This contract signing may not give us the answers officially, but it wil give us some strong indications.

Follow along with Dave Meltzer’s live coverage of the Chamber on Sunday night.

Matt Hardy vs. Bray Wyatt added to WWE Elimination Chamber card

Coming out of tonight’s go-home edition of Raw, there are only four matches officially announced for the Elimination Chamber.

Matt Hardy vs. Bray Wyatt was added to the pay-per-view’s card tonight. Though they’ve been feuding since Hardy became “Woken,” this will be their first singles match on PPV.

Wyatt distracted Hardy during his Elimination Chamber qualifying match earlier this month, leading to Hardy losing to Elias. Hardy then got his revenge after Wyatt’s qualifier against Roman Reigns. They were both involved in a second chance fatal-four way last Monday, which ended with Seth Rollins and Finn Balor pinning Wyatt at the same time.

While the Tag Team title match for the PPV hasn’t been confirmed, Titus O’Neil & Apollo defeated champions Cesaro & Sheamus on Raw tonight. The Revival and Luke Gallows & Karl Anderson have also been feuding in recent weeks.

The T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas will host Sunday’s Elimination Chamber show. Here’s everything that’s been announced for it up to this point:

  • Braun Strowman vs. John Cena vs. Elias vs. Roman Reigns vs. The Miz vs. Seth Rollins vs. Finn Balor in an Elimination Chamber match (winner challenges for Brock Lesnar’s Universal Championship at WrestleMania)
  • Ronda Rousey signing her Raw contract
  • Raw Women’s Champion Alexa Bliss defending her title against Sasha Banks, Bayley, Mickie James, Mandy Rose, and Sonya Deville in an Elimination Chamber match
  • Asuka vs. Nia Jax (Jax gets added to the Raw Women’s title match at WrestleMania if she wins)
  • Matt Hardy vs. Bray Wyatt

Gauntlet match set for Monday’s WWE Raw

Ahead of the Elimination Chamber, there will be a gauntlet match on Monday’s go-home edition of Raw.

All seven of the participants in the men’s Elimination Chamber match will be taking part in the gauntlet. Those wrestlers are: Braun Strowman, Elias, John Cena, Roman Reigns, The Miz, Seth Rollins, and Finn Balor.

WWE hasn’t announced the entry order for the gauntlet, but the match type starts with two people facing off, then another person takes the place of whoever loses until there’s only one wrestler left standing.

Rollins and Balor became the last additions to the Elimination Chamber lineup after they both pinned Bray Wyatt at the same time during a fatal five-way match last Monday. The winner of the men’s Chamber will go on to challenge Brock Lesnar for the Universal Championship at WrestleMania.

The Miz will be the first person to enter the Elimination Chamber during the match, with Elias set to enter last.

Monday’s Raw will also set up the rest of the card for the pay-per-view. All that’s been announced so far are the men’s and women’s Elimination Chambers, Asuka vs. Nia Jax, and an appearance by Ronda Rousey where she’ll be “signing her Monday Night Raw contract.”

Rollins & Balor both added to men’s Elimination Chamber match

There will be an additional participant in the upcoming men’s Elimination Chamber match.

An advertised fatal four-way qualifying match ended up turning into a five-way on Raw tonight as Seth Rollins was added. It also included Finn Balor, Apollo Crews, Bray Wyatt, and Matt Hardy, and Rollins and Balor pinned Wyatt at the same time after giving him a powerbomb during a Tower of Doom spot.

The show went off the air with an angle where Rollins and Balor argued over who won, but WWE quickly followed up on the finish in a Facebook Live video. After they continued to argue and lobby for the final spot, Kurt Angle said both Rollins and Balor deserve to be in the Elimination Chamber and announced that there will be seven men in the match.

WWE didn’t reveal what the logistics for the Elimination Chamber will be now that there’s a seventh person. It could either start with three people or an additional pod could be added.

Rollins, Balor, John Cena, Elias, Braun Strowman, Roman Reigns, and The Miz will be the seven wrestlers in the Elimination Chamber. The winner will challenge for Brock Lesnar’s Universal Championship at WrestleMania.

As a result of matches that took place over the last two weeks, The Miz will be the first person to enter the Elimination Chamber and Elias will be the final participant let into the match.

The T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas is set to host the Elimination Chamber pay-per-view on February 25th.

Ronda Rousey contract signing set for WWE Elimination Chamber

When Ronda Rousey appeared at the end of the Royal Rumble, it inevitably raised a few questions about what’s next for her in WWE.

It took a couple of weeks to get some of those answers, but we now know when her next appearance will be and which brand she’ll be joining. Kurt Angle revealed on Raw tonight that Rousey would be “signing her Monday Night Raw contract” at the brand’s Elimination Chamber pay-per-view on February 25th in Las Vegas.

The next step will be WWE confirming Rousey’s plans for WrestleMania. Dave Meltzer reported last month that Rousey teaming with a partner against Stephanie McMahon & Triple H was the plan at that time, with Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson being the first choice to partner with Rousey if it’s possible for him to do the match.

Triple H noted on a call with WWE investors last week that the company was in the process of finalizing Rousey’s actual contract. Triple H said it would be a multi-year deal and pro wrestling would be her first priority.

After showing up at the Royal Rumble, Rousey returned to Colombia to finish filming the movie “Mile 22.”

Elimination Chamber qualifying match confirmed for Raw next week

With one more spot remaining going into the episode, the lineup for the men’s Elimination Chamber will be finalized on Raw next week.

Finn Balor, Matt Hardy, Apollo Crews, and Bray Wyatt will face off in a fatal four-way for the final spot in the Chamber match. All four of those wrestlers lost their initial qualifying matches. Kane, who was defeated by Braun Strowman in a qualifier, was involved in an injury angle after his loss.

The winner of the fatal four-way joins Strowman, John Cena, Elias, Roman Reigns, and The Miz in the Elimination Chamber. Elias will be the last person to enter the Chamber during the match after defeating Cena and Strowman in a triple threat on Raw tonight by stealing the pin from Strowman.

The men’s Elimination Chamber will decide Brock Lesnar’s challenger for WrestleMania.

Alexa Bliss will also defend her Raw Women’s Championship against Sasha Banks, Bayley, Mickie James, Mandy Rose, and Sonya Deville in an Elimination Chamber match at the February 25th pay-per-view. Asuka vs. Nia Jax has been announced as well, with the stipulation being that Jax will be added to the Raw Women’s title match at WrestleMania if she wins.

Women’s Elimination Chamber lineup set, Asuka to face Nia Jax

Alexa Bliss’ Elimination Chamber challengers were confirmed on Raw tonight, plus another match was made official for the pay-per-view.

Kurt Angle announced that Sasha Banks, Bayley, Mickie James, Mandy Rose, and Sonya Deville would be challenging for Bliss’ Raw Women’s Championship in the Elimination Chamber. He noted that Nia Jax wasn’t included in that list, then revealed that Jax would be facing Asuka at the PPV.

If Jax wins, she’ll be added to the Raw Women’s title match at WrestleMania. Asuka hasn’t indicated whether she’ll be challenging the Raw or SmackDown Women’s Champion in New Orleans, with the storyline being that she can choose which one she’ll be facing.

During Angle’s announcement, Bliss accused him of being sexist for making her defend her title at the PPV when Brock Lesnar doesn’t have to. Angle responded by pointing out that Bliss hasn’t had a title defense since October and asked the audience if they wanted to see the women’s Chamber match.

Braun Strowman, Elias, John Cena, Roman Reigns, and The Miz have qualified for the men’s Elimination Chamber, with one more spot remaining. That match will decide who challenges Lesnar for the Universal Championship at WrestleMania.

Elimination Chamber 2018 will take place at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on February 25th. Those three matches are all that’s been announced so far.

First-ever women’s Elimination Chamber match official for next month

Following last night’s women’s Royal Rumble, the WWE women’s division is already set for another first-ever match.

Stephanie McMahon opened Raw tonight and confirmed that Alexa Bliss would be defending her Women’s Championship in an Elimination Chamber match on February 25th in Las Vegas. None of the other participants have been revealed yet, but there will be five challengers for Bliss’ title.

Asuka, the winner of the women’s Royal Rumble, was also in the ring when Stephanie made the announcement. The storyline is that Asuka is able to choose whether she’ll face the Raw or SmackDown Women’s Champion at WrestleMania, and Stephanie told her that Bliss may not be champion then due to having to defend her title in the Elimination Chamber.

The T-Mobile Arena, which will be hosting the Elimination Chamber pay-per-view, had been indicating that there would be two Chamber matches in their advertising for the event. And the Sporting News reported earlier today that the women’s Elimination Chamber would be happening.

Brock Lesnar’s challenger for WrestleMania will be decided in the men’s Elimination Chamber match, with six qualifying matches set to take place in advance of the PPV.

Three WWE Elimination Chamber qualifying matches set for tonight

Brock Lesnar’s challenger for WrestleMania will be decided at the Elimination Chamber next month, and the first three qualifying matches for the pay-per-view are set for tonight.

John Cena vs. Finn Balor, Braun Strowman vs. Kane in a last man standing match, and Matt Hardy vs. Elias are scheduled for tonight’s episode of Raw, with the winners advancing to the PPV. Cena vs. Balor will be the first time the two have ever faced off in a singles match, though Cena did eliminate Balor in last night’s Royal Rumble.

While WWE has yet to announce the three remaining qualifying matches, Roman Reigns has been expected to be Lesnar’s WrestleMania challenger for nearly a year. Dave Meltzer reported last March that Lesnar vs. Reigns was the plan for WrestleMania 34.

After losing the Intercontinental Championship to The Miz on Raw 25, Reigns will get his rematch for the title tonight.

The T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada will host Elimination Chamber on February 25th. The show is the final Raw-exclusive PPV before WrestleMania, and the venue has indicated in their advertising that there will be two Elimination Chamber matches.

Daily Pro Wrestling History (02/23): WWE Elimination Chamber 2014

1939

Toronto, Ontario, Canada:
– World Title: Jim Londos beat Joe Savoldi to retain title
– Hans Steinke beat Housepainter Hogan 
– Vic Christy beat Tom Mahoney (default) 
– Jules Strongbow beat Ernie Powers 
– Hardy Kruskamp beat Cardiff Giant

1944

Des Moines, Iowa:
– NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ray Steele and World Junior Heavyweight Champion Ken Fenelon wrestled to a 90 minute draw

1964

St. Paul, Minnesota:
– Dick the Bruiser & The Crusher beat Moose Evans & Verne Gagne to regain the AWA tag team title
– Wilbur Snyder beat Angelo Poffo
– Mitsu Arakawa beat Tiny Mills
– Rene Goulet beat Hans Schmidt by DQ
– Doug Gilbert beat Marquis DeParee

1969

Toronto, Ontario, Canada:
– The Sheik beat Might Igor
– Lord Athol Layton beat Masked Assassin by disqualification
– Whipper Billy Watson and Bulldog Brower took 2 of 3 falls from Al Costello and Mighty Ursuy 
– Paul DeMarco beat Joe Christie
– Fred Atkins beat Eric the Red
– Rocky Johnson drew Ivan Kalmikoff

1970

Denver, Colorado:
– AWA Champion Verne Gagne beat Harley Race
– Non Title: The Crusher & Edouard Carpentier beat AWA Tag Team Champions Mad Dog Vachon & Butcher Vachon 
– Red Bastien drew Lars Anderson
– Pepper Gomez beat Dr. X 

1971

Portland, Oregon:
– Kurt Von Steiger & Karl Von Steiger beat Mad Dog Vachon & Butcher Vachon to win AWA World Tag Title (title change only acknowledged in Portland. The Vachons were on their way to Japan for a lengthy tour and decided to drop the AWA Tag Straps to the Von Steigers in Portland without Verne Gagne’s knowledge or permission)
– Stan Stasiak beat Sailor White
– Dutch Savage beat Les Thornton
– Bobby Nichols drew Haru Sasaki
– Eric Froelich drew Moose Morowski

1978

Jacksonville, Florida:
– Dusty Rhodes & Eddie Graham defeated Karl Kox & Bobby Duncum in a taped fist match
– Jack & Jerry Brisco defeated Mike Graham & Terry Gibbs (sub. for Steve Kiern) to retain US tag titles
– Ivan Putski defeated the Bounty Hunter
– Ivan Koloff & Mr. Saito defeated Rocky Johnson & Pedro Morales
– Mr. Wrestling II defeated Tank Patterson (sub. for Hiro Matsuda)
– The Fabulous Moolah defeated Vicki Williams
– Porkchop Cash defeated Randy Brewer
– WWWF World Champion Bob Backlund fought NWA World Champion Harley Race to a draw

1986

Chicago, Illinois:
– Sgt. Slaughter went to a no contest with AWA Champion Stan Hansen
– Road Warriors beat Bill Irwin & Scott Irwin
– Curt Hennig & Scott Hall & Brad Rheingans beat Boris Zhukov & Mongolian Stomper & Nord The Barbarian
– No DQ Match: Larry Zbyszko beat Nick Bockwinkel
– Midnight Rockers beat The Alaskans
– Colonel DeBeers beat Buck Zumhofe
– Leon White beat Doug Somers

1987

Memphis, Tennessee:
– Jerry Lawler & AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel beat Austin Idol & Humongous
– Alan West won Bunkhouse stampede
– Big Bubba & Goliath beat Jeff Jarrett & Billy Travis to win Southern tag belts
– Paul Diamond beat Johnny Boyd by DQ
– Cobra & Lou Winston beat The Hunter & Tony Burton
– Tarzan Goto & Akio Sato beat Alan West & King Cobra
– Soul Train Jones beat Don Bass

1990

WWF Main Event: Detroit, Michigan:
– WWF World Champion Hulk Hogan defeated Randy Savage (Buster Douglas, who had just defeated Mike Tyson in Tokyo for the World Championship in Boxing was the special referee. After the match, Savage shoved Douglas and Douglas knocked out Savage)
– Intercontinental Champion Ultimate Warrior defeated Dino Bravo 

1991

Milwaukee, Wisconsin:
– Larry Zbyszko pinned Tommy Rich
– Brian Pillman & Tim Horner defeated Scott Sandlin & Rob Morgan
– Ricky Morton pinned Rip Rogers
– Tom Zenk pinned Bobby Eaton
– WCW US Champion Lex Luger defeated Stan Hansen via disqualification when Hansen began choking Luger with his bullrope
– Sting defeated WCW World Champion Ric Flair via disqualification
– WCW Tag Team Champions Doom defeated Barry Windham & Terry Taylor (sub. for WCW TV Champion Arn Anderson) in a streetfight

1997

WCW SuperBrawl: San Francisco, California:
– Syxx defeated Dean Malenko to win thee WCW Cruiserweight Championship
– Konnan, La Parka and Villano IV defeated Juventud Guerrera, Super Caló and Ciclope
– Prince Iaukea defeated Rey Mysterio, Jr. to retain the WCW World Television Championship
– Diamond Dallas Page defeated Buff Bagwell by disqualification
– Eddy Guerrero defeated Chris Jericho to retain the WCW United States Heavyweight Championship
– The Public Enemy (Rocco Rock and Johnny Grunge) defeated Harlem Heat (Booker T and Stevie Ray) and The Faces of Fear (Meng and The Barbarian)
– Jeff Jarrett defeated Steve McMichael (with Debra McMichael)
– Chris Benoit (with Woman) defeated The Taskmaster (with Miss Jacquelyn and Jimmy Hart) in a San Francisco Death match    
– Lex Luger and The Giant defeated The Outsiders to win the WCW World Tag Team Championship
– Hollywood Hogan defeated Roddy Piper to retain the WCW World Heavyweight Championship

2002

Ring of Honor debut show: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania:
– Low Ki defeated Christopher Daniels and Bryan Danielson 
– The Amazing Red defeated Jay Briscoe 
– Super Crazy defeated Eddy Guerrero to become the first IWA Puerto Rico Intercontinental champion

2004

Omaha, Nebraska:
– Victoria defeated champion Molly Holly, Jazz and Lita in an elimination match to win the WWE Women’s Title

2008

ROH 6th Anniversary Show: New York City:
– ROH Tag Team champs Davey Richards & Rocky Romero defeated Ruckus & Jigsaw
– Bryan Danielson defeated ROH champ Nigel McGuinness by DQ
– FIP champ Roderick Strong won a three-way No DQ match over Necro Butcher and Erick Stevens

2014

WWE Elimination Chamber: Minneapolis, Minnesota:
– WWE Intercontinental champion Big E beat Jack Swagger to retain the title
– WWE Tag Team champions The New Age Outlaws defeated The Usos to retain the title
– Batista defeated Alberto Del Rio
– Elimination Chamber: WWE World Heavyweight champion Randy Orton defeated John Cena, Daniel Bryan, Cesaro, Sheamus and Christian to retain the title

Figure Four Weekly 2/13/2017: Bray Wyatt’s overdue WWE Championship win

From nearly the moment The Wyatt Family debuted on the main roster, Bray Wyatt’s place as a future WWE Champion seemed almost certain.

The only surprising thing about Wyatt capturing the title is that it took until Sunday night at the Elimination Chamber, where he was finally presented as the force that WWE has all too often failed to portray him as over the last three-plus years.

Despite almost always being featured in feuds that have gotten significant television time, Wyatt’s booking has usually failed to match his character. And he’s never gotten the top-level protection that a gimmick like his requires.

There were the WrestleMania losses to John Cena and The Undertaker that stagnated Wyatt’s forward momentum. And while those didn’t necessarily hurt his status in a vacuum, they typified the issues that he’s had for his entire WWE run. He was never allowed to win the biggest matches that would have established him as a legitimate star.

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WWE Elimination Chamber fan feedback

Thumbs In Middle.

Mainly because my expectations were so low for this show but I actually found it an enjoyable show. The crowd made it feel much more like a real good SmackDown vs. a PPV show but I thought the wrestling and storyline progressions were solid. Main event and Orton/Harper were both very good. This was a show that should have been over at the 2.5 hour mark rather then 3 plus. 

Unlike Jim From Virginia, I was not super excited for three women’s matches but I thought Nikki/Natalya until the lame finish was a really good match. Feel bad for Natalya as she is so talented but just used to get others to look good in the ring and she did. This was best I’ve ever seen Nikki Bella look. 

James/Lynch was a solid women’s match.

Naomi/Bliss was a little sloppy in a few spots, including the finish but it was fine. 

Tag Team Turmoil match was fun. Actually thought after the Usos beatdown that they may actually go with the Ascension winning so they did a good job. American Alpha are really good but they just aren’t connecting on the main roster like they should. Hooking them up with Kurt Angle would get them there. 

Harper/Orton was a really good pro wrestling match. Built nicely and did the job to show Harper should be a main eventer on SmackDown.

  • Worst Match: Kalisto/Crews vs. Dolph. When it was Dolph and Crews it was fine. Crowd was oddly into this match and into Dolph. However, it really annoyed me when Kalisto came limping down then did all sorts of lucha things fine then half-heartedly would grab his back.
  • Best Match: Elimination Chamber. Really entertaining match. Looks like Corbin-Ambrose program coming out of it which I like. Corbin has come a long way in ring. Styles-Cena just work incredibly well together. Miz’s facials in the pod was really great. Wyatt pinning Cena clean was surprising. Solid job of rehabbing Bray as a monster. Great transition to the finish. 

Glad I did not drink as Kevin Dunn’s camera work gave me the spins. 

– Mike Flynn

**********

Thumbs Up

  • Best Match: Elim Chamber
  • Worst Match: Nikki Bella vs. Natalya

For the first couple of hours, this was a glorified SmackDown episode. With American Alpha pretty much beating every team on the roster, either they have to create a new tag team from parts — perhaps Dolph Ziggler teams with Baron Corbin — or they do another sort of gauntlet for WrestleMania.

Luke Harper had a great match, but no matter how the announcers screamed that “win, lose, or draw, he’s proven he can be a main eventer,” he’s still slated in the middle as a guy who can’t win the big match.

– Jeff Cohen

**********

Thumbs up really liked the show overall.

  • Worst Match: Mojo vs. Hawkins on the pre show. On the main card everything was solid.
  • Best Match: Luke Harper vs. Randy Orton. Loved the story! I think this is for sure Luke Harper’s best singles match.

Randy is great at putting guys over even with winning the match. This was one of Orton’s best matches.

– Allan Hendrix

**********

Thumbs Up

  • Best Match: Elimination Chamber, Harper vs. Orton.
  • Worst match: Kalisto & Crews vs. Ziggler

This show was far better than I expected it to be, honestly. Everything feels like they at least found their footing or understood the story they needed to tell. Overall, a very solid follow up to the Rumble, which was the best PPV they’ve done in years.

They did everything they could to fix the bad idea of the Ziggler handicap match, I guess, but apparently they just decided they want to have Ziggler lose all the time and look bad doing it. This is the same guy six months ago was in a feud at SummerSlam for the World title. He also supposedly threatened a man’s life on television a month ago and I forgot he was even in the Rumble until he was out there.

All that aside, the show was good, all the women’s matches were solid, if a bit sloppy. Guess is a multi-woman at mania, maybe a ladder or something? Seems weird to have this many moving pieces, but I don’t know what they’d do otherwise.

I’m really hoping they give AJ the big showcase he deserves, too because while Bray won the match, this felt like the AJ Styles and friends show. Elimination Chamber matches are usually fun, but honestly seeing AJ come up with new moves to do in all of WWE’s gimmick matches is one of the best things about the product right now. I love Owens and Cesaro, but AJ has to be the best wrestler WWE’s had at least since Bryan was fully healthy, right?

Speaking of Bray, while it’s been kind of a foregone conclusion since you reported the card, it was nice to see him get a win, especially pinning AJ and Cena. They’ve overlooked Bray it seems from time to time, but just looking at his WrestleMania appearances, he faced Cena his first time, Undertaker his second, verbally sparred with the Rock last year, and this year he’s walking in as champ and feuding with Orton. That’s a tough four-year run to beat.

Seems like they’re setting up Corbin vs. Dean for the IC belt, too. Anyway, the only big question left it seems like is what they wind up doing with AJ, and to a lesser extent with Joe and Zayn, for Mania. I’m going to be disappointed if they take the belt of Kevin and put it on Goldberg, but that seems inevitable at this point. I will say, it feels ridiculously hot shotty that they’ve had the WWE Championship belt change hands two times in a month, we might have it change hands again at Mania, and the Universal title, presumably, is going to shift three times after Mania. Seems silly.

– Jonathan Beckner

**********

Thumbs in the middle

  • Best: Elimination Chamber
  • Worst: Ziggler vs. Crews/Kalisto 

 This show continues the SmackDown exclusive show trend of having a solid yet totally forgettable undercard followed by a great main event involving AJ Styles. 

I thought this was the best Elimination Chamber match in years, probably since the 2011 Elimination Chamber PPV. I’m glad Wyatt finally won the title but the timing of it feels out of nowhere and kind of “too little too late.” Unless the writers have an awesome story in mind for Wyatt vs. Orton, I really don’t understand them booking this as the WWE title match, but then again there is a lot I don’t understand about WWE booking. 

– Nick Randall

**********

Thumbs Up

  • Best Match: Chamber
  • Worst Match: Mojo vs. Hawkins

SmackDown in my opinion continues to deliver for the most part despite having one hand tied behind their back for the most part with a much smaller roster of stars than Raw.  There are certainly some things they can be doing better, but they seem to be trying.

The worst part of the show wasn’t wrestling, it was the Carmella & Ellsworth nonsense. No offense to Mr. Ellsworth, but I don’t find a reason for him to be employed. His short stint has run its course. Now he needs to fade back to the local wrestling he was doing before.

Mojo Rawley vs. Curt Hawkins while nothing special was better than I expected. It wasn’t the quick squash I was assuming they would do. Mojo rightfully wins.

The main show kicked off with Mickie James vs. Becky Lynch. Very solid match here and I do think James should have gone over in her first big match since returning, but it was good. I was quite tired of Otunga trying to say James had ring rust from being out of action for seven years. Finally JBL chimed in and corrected him saying she had been competing elsewhere. Also apparently Otunga doesn’t have the WWE Network cause he would have seen James compete quite well a few months back at NXT Takeover.

Apollo Crews & Kalisto vs. Dolph Ziggler was pretty basic.  Why they even put this match together is beyond me. They essentially buried all three participants in this match. Ziggler is a heel who never wins and Crews is a babyface who is now getting boo’d and can only win on a fluke or with a partner. This feud needs to end now. Rethink what to do with Crews before he ends up with Jack Swagger in the SmackDown basement or wherever they stashed him.

Tag Team Turmoil was pretty good. Although at this point since American Alpha has run through everybody on SmackDown. What can they do next? If they use any of these teams for a title match at Mania it’s going to seem pretty lame. They really need to bring in a new team like the Revival or somebody to freshen things up. Even move the Shining Stars over from Raw where they are doing nothing would be good.

Nikki Bella vs. Natalya had some good action. Wasn’t expecting a double countout finish especially since Nikki has to move onto feuding with Maryse I guess for the WrestleMania mixed tag. Apparently this feud is continuing. 

Randy Orton vs. Luke Harper was a good match. Started pretty slow, but really built well.Thought there might be a sliver of hope for Harper to win just to put him in position for a possible triple threat at Mania, but I guess they want to keep Orton strong for the Mania title match.

Naomi wins the Women’s Title from Alexa Bliss in a good match. Again thought it was too soon to take the title from Bliss, not that Naomi doesn’t deserve her chance. Bliss makes a good heel champ and at this point overall it looks like most of the title holders going into Mania will be faces. What happen to the days of having the heel champs defend and the big blow off of feuds where the face wins the title at Mania?

Elimination Chamber was the best match on the show. Always helps to have AJ Styles make whatever match he is in that much better. Bray Wyatt wins as has been predicted and now we have our Wyatt Family showdown for WrestleMania. During the match I feel like Miz was beaten pretty easily and clean by Cena which doesn’t do anything for me wanting to see them against each at WrestleMania. That just feels like a basic TV match. 

– Robb Block

**********

Thumbs Up

Hawkins vs. Rawley **1/2

As pre-show matches go I thought it was alright. Hawkins is a fairly steady hand, Rawley is green & raw, but he has presence, decent showmanship & some decent looking offense, I’m not as down on his gimmick as some are, & I thought he looked decent in places here. Think the timing could’ve been better on some of the kick-outs at the back-end & there were a few minor awkward moments, but again, I thought it was alright & they did more than you see in some pre-show matches.

Becky vs. Mickie ***1/4

Thought it was a good, solid match. Liked the layout. Little different with Becky blowing the beginning of her comeback, then Mickie cutting her off to transition back into the heat, then Becky restarting her comeback. Rhythm could’ve been better & execution of certain spots could’ve been crisper, but I liked it. Thought Mickie looked good, her technique was good for the most part, liked the way she controlled the pace during the heat, liked some of her choices & thought she generally looked very savvy & solid.

You could argue both needed the win, although with Mickie only just coming in the door, I thought it was a little early to beat her, & they’ve only given her one victory in a physical angle & a few promos to help her over, as well as the initial angle to bring her in, of course. Having said that, at least it was only a flash finish.

Worst Match: Crews & Kalisto vs. Ziggler *3/4

The match was what the match was, but as far as the booking I don’t know where to start & could go on about this for an age. 

Just such a bizarre situation with this two faces & one heel handicap match. There’s creativity, there’s variety, there’s innovation & then there’s stupidity. I’d class this entire situation as the latter. You can do it a certain way if it’s this dominant monster heel, or I suppose if it’s this guy who you’ve put a ton of heat on over an extended period of time — but it’s Dolph Ziggler.

And just these poor babyfaces. They’ve been battered at every turn & then are given a man advantage against Ziggler, it just kills them, it’s terrible. And this has done little for Ziggler either. I mean, you can do the “I go over, you get over” — but it’s gotta be the right situation & they’ve done it four times now, with it losing impact on each occasion. The guy clearly needs strong momentum right now & these half measures as well as heavily character based booking decisions aren’t helping. 

On top of all of that, it’s pretty similar to the situation with Neville & the cruiserweights a while ago, that here’s this guy who is a bigger star & has done more of substance, being positioned against guys who done little to impress the audience, that they have some degree of apathy for, & are bordering on an annoyance to them — so they of course choose the bigger star.

Plus, with the chair, the audience likes weapon use, & as we’ve seen many times, nowadays don’t feel sympathy as much for the characters, & are happy to enjoy weapon shots with little regard for the victim, regardless of who it is. It can still get the person over, but there’s little chance of heat (to be fair to them it is very difficult to get heat on a heel nowadays, but you think they’d notice & change accordingly, but maybe they don’t care, who knows), but even the prior isn’t going happen with such excessiveness. Also I preferred Ziggler’s mannerisms during the Lawler angle where he was this cold, miserable heel.

Quite the rant, but the whole thing is a complete mess.

Tag Team Turmoil ***1/4

Thought lack of pre-planning was definitely a problem here. They really needed to think ahead & build-up some of these teams prior to this, but of course that doesn’t happen with such short-term booking. I thought it was a decent match, thought Slater/Rhyno & American Alpha looked good, liked the layout with the first half focused on Slater & Rhyno, setting the table for an Usos-Alpha feud, & putting the babyface champions in a vulnerable position with them overcoming against the remaining heel team in big fashion.

Ascension would never be your first choice, but if you wanted do what they did with The Usos, Ascension was frankly the best option with the nature of their gimmick & stature, as opposed to the remaining heel teams.

Natalya vs. Nikki ***1/2

Finish was a shame, but I thought it was a strong effort & good match. Was a little thrown by the beginning of the match as it was not you’d expect for such a heated feud, but it made sense with the heel trying to play to her strengths & exploit the face’s weakness, only for the face to match her. I enjoyed the uniqueness with some of the submission work, some interesting hope-spots & an interesting layout overall. Thought Natalya was great as she always is, good presence during the heat & solid as a rock. Nikki was decent, although there were a few awkward moments. Again, good effort & liked it.  

Orton vs. Harper ****

Thought it was a very good match. I did think there were some rhythm issues & was a little sluggish at times, but it built great, Orton made Harper look good — although you can see his heel style bumping is restricted as he’s clearly trying to protect his neck, thought the crowd didn’t really know what to make of it initially & perhaps didn’t believe in Harper, who also wasn’t very over & perhaps could’ve done with greater preparation for the occasion, but they got them in the end & I thought the sell for the RKO was superb. Also on the sluggishness, I think it’d be of Orton’s benefit to drop some weight.

Alexa vs. Naomi **1/2

They were in a tough position, but I thought they did some nice & unique stuff, there was good effort, there was some feeble looking offense at times & things fell-apart a bit at the end, also intensity was an issue, but again, I thought it was ok.

Pretty surprised by the finish, but I don’t think Naomi is a bad choice. Her entrance is a big shine, she’s athletic & got lots of flashy offense, she looks good, is endearing & has personality, I’m not against it & think she could get fairly over. You aren’t gonna get a lot of rather good matches out of her, but I think she’s far from the worst option.

Best Match: Elimination Chamber ****1/4

Wild match. Lots of crazy stuff & nice spots, & the crowd was lapping it up. Glad they finally got rid of that grating on the outside (or perhaps just padded it up) & increased the heights so guys weren’t as restricted with stuff from above the Chamber. Styles made everyone look great & the bump from the top of the chamber was nuts. Ambrose worked ever so hard & took a nasty landing off that double German.

In addition, Cena appeared to hurt his leg on that torture rack spinning powerbomb of Styles’. Thought it was laid-out well booking wise, with Corbin looking real good prior to his opening elimination, & frankly there was no real easy option for who should go out first. They set the table nicely for an Corbin-Ambrose feud (which looked likely after the last Miz-Ambrose match) & put Wyatt over pretty huge, who got quite the reaction for his victory. Real good stuff.

– Tom Griffiths

**********

Thumbs up. Surprised how solid the show was.

  • Best Match: Harper vs Orton
  • Worst Match: Ziggler vs Kalisto & Crews

Missed the pre-show match. All of the women’s matches were good, which was important to holding this show together. Kept me engaged throughout. Thought everything worked well. The whole show made sense. 

Not sure how Ziggler is a heel, losing a 2 on 1 where he did the smart thing to even the odds at the start. Doesn’t help Kalisto and Apollo for sure. One of the great things about SmackDown is everyone seems to have improved their place in the company pecking order. Except those two. 

Harper looked great. Hard choice between the Chamber match and this, but I prefer a good 1 on 1 battle with a clean finish to the gimmick match any day. 

Naomi vs. Alexa Bliss was in a tough spot, but they did a good job. Naomi came off very well in the post-match interview and again on Talking Smack. 

Elimination Chamber was really well booked and worked. Again, everyone involved comes out looking good. Could easily see this as best match, too. 

The crowd was great and really helped the show come across well.

– Joe Daniel

**********

Thumbs in the Middle

  • Best Match: John Cena vs. AJ Styles vs. Dean Ambrose vs. The Miz vs. Bray Wyatt vs. Baron Corbin
  • Worst Match: Apollo Crews & Kalisto vs. Dolph Ziggler

Very good main event. I got legit bored watching earlier in the show, though. WWE over-saturation plus a B-show from the lesser-valued brand, along with three women’s matches.

It really annoyed me that the announcers clearly were not allowed to bring up the hypothetical of Randy Orton vs. Bray Wyatt until after the main event ended. Kind of like how they weren’t allowed to acknowledge Mickie James wrestling Asuka in NXT a few months back.

– Lou Pickney

**********

Thumbs Up

  • Best Match: Chamber
  • Worst Match: Mojo v Curt

Good but not amazing show. Was glad that having three women’s matches in the modern age wasn’t cringeworthy because there were some shows in that past at times that had to have two divas matches on one card and that was just death. The depth of the division still shows a little when you use all.

On the same note the tag division gets really exposed when you keep doing these scrambles and 10 and 12 men matches. I still strongly feel one women’s and one tag champs are the way to go and have them travel between shows. Again though the quality of the women’s matches all solid. May be in the minority but enjoyed the Bliss match the best. Naomi has revived her career starting with the new entrance idea and its a good story to have her defend in her hometown. The scramble had some cool moments but due to format it never gets going. 

 As has been pointed out; the handicap match concept had so many issues but parts of the actual match were good. Why wasn’t it just a three way where you could have the faces work together at times but still try to beat each other. They have no clue on Ziggler. He’s booked as a failure constantly and not in the “Daniel Bryan” way.

Harper-Orton was a standout performance by Harper back to his original breakout but could tell crowd is confused as it wants to love Orton and Harper has been a heel so long. Also the tough thing with a Harper solo push is he is ALWAYS going to be associated with the Wyatt Family gimmick it feels so will always be a feeling of reforming or inferiority. If they could get Orton over as a true heel I wouldn’t mind a Wyatt face turn as a modern day Undertaker considering how much the fans love the entrance etc.

Timing may not be right but I thought Chamber match was great. Not sure about this new Chamber, guessing due to safety and ease of fitting it around rings was the change. Even though everyone knew the finish I am glad they didn’t have a change of heart. The character needed a title win to advance. Hopefully this is not a case of four WrestleManias in a row where Wyatt loses or gets punked out (no match at 32).

hey have done a great job of making a group of legit title contenders of all the folks who were in the Chamber plus Orton. They could easily include Ziggler in there if they knew how to handle him. Fastlane has a bit more oomph behind it that could have made this a lame duck but the solid content put it in a good place.

– Michael O’Brien