WWE Crown Jewel review: A show that happened

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In case you missed it, there was a WWE premium live event on Saturday in Saudi Arabia.

Cody Rhodes and Liv Morgan won their Crown Jewel championship matches, earning huge, gaudy-looking title belts….that were immediately walked over to WWE’s amusement park/museum/whatever it is a short walk away from the arena and put on display, not to be seen on television for at least a year.

Does this all matter? Not really. Will it be talked about much on Monday? My feeling is no.

Saturday’s show in Riyadh was fine, easy to watch, and went by fast. It advanced the latest in the Bloodline drama, the centerpiece of WWE storytelling at the moment. It was a typical show in Saudi Arabia where the focus was making the country happy by giving them a gimmick that’s for them and them only because they are very special. You get very special status, after all, if you give WWE $100 million dollars a year for two shows.

Crown Jewel’s main event saw Rhodes defeat Gunther with the Bret Hart finish from WWE WrestleMania VIII to become the men’s Crown Jewel Champion. This was a fine main event, but I wouldn’t call it outstanding. The heat was just kind of there and I was expecting more from these two, especially when you consider that this was a champion vs. champion match. But like most of these matches, it is unlikely I will remember most of it by this time next month.

The women’s Crown Jewel Championship went to Morgan who defeated Nia Jax after 1000 people interfered in a match that was not that good. Okay, now I want to talk about my least favorite storyline in WWE right now which is Tiffany Stratton teasing the MITB cash-in. You see, WWE loves to do this tease each year. They spent most of last year and this year with Damian Priest agonizing over whether or not to shoot his shot, and now it’s Stratton’s turn.

After so many years of the same trials and tribulations, it’s boring and trite to see this play out yet again. This year, they have turned up the annoyance factor to 11 as Stratton teases cashing in this briefcase in every single solitary segment she is in. It has now become her entire character. To be frank, I don’t care if she cashes in anymore, especially against Nia Jax who is well on her way to winning Most Overrated in the Observer Awards.

As usual, the Bloodline vs. Bloodline six-man tag match was more about furthering their story than what went down in their match. Not that this was bad, as it was heated and there was some good action here and there, but the story coming out of the match is stronger than the match itself with Solo Sikoa pinning Roman Reigns to score the win for his team, setting up a future singles match down the line. As the new Bloodline picked the bones of the old after the match, Sami Zayn came down for the save but took out Reigns by accident. So not only are Jey Uso and Reigns still not getting along, Zayn has inserted himself back into the story and no one trusts anyone, especially after The Usos saw Zayn talking to Sikoa on SmackDown. Intriuge, especially with Survivor Series just weeks away!

The United States title match saw LA Knight retain the title over Andrade and Carmelo Hayes. Probably the right choice as he’s way more over than the other two despite the good matches Andrade and Hayes have been having on SmackDown. This was cool and had some neat spots, but it didn’t last that long. Knight has now beaten both of these guys multiple times, so I don’t know where you go with them after this. Maybe they’ll just wrestle against each other forever. 

Kevin Owens and Randy Orton didn’t have a match. Instead, they brawled, took out officials, and capped it off with Owens giving Orton an elbow off a platform onto a bunch of tables. Owens is definitely in line for a title match sooner than later, so him doing a job doesn’t make sense and I feel Orton is also getting a title shot somewhere down the line. What happened here was probably for the best.

Bianca Belair and Jade Cargill retained their Women’s Tag Team titles in a pretty good four-way match that was filled with action. This had its strong moments, particularly whenever Damage CTRL were on offense. We’re kinda just waiting to see where the Belair and Cargill team goes as WWE will want to split them, but when will they pull the trigger?

Seth Rollins defeating Bronson Reed was fine, but I kinda expected more of a wild brawl all around the ring and while the finish played into that, most of this was just a wrestling match — a perfectly fine wrestling match, yes, but just a match nonetheless. Reed immediately got back up to his feet after taking a curb stomp, so there’s probably more here to come.

So that wraps up Crown Jewel, a show that will go down in the record books as a Show That Happened. Up next for WWE is Survivor Series, where we’ll likely see Bloodline vs. Bloodline. Finally!

Roman Reigns & The Usos vs. The Bloodline official for WWE Crown Jewel

Roman Reigns will return to action for just the second time since WrestleMania at Saturday’s WWE Crown Jewel PLE.

In a bout that was hinted at during last Friday’s SmackDown taping, Reigns will team with Jimmy Uso and Jey Uso to face three members of Solo Sikoa’s Bloodline at Crown Jewel in a six-man tag.

All four members of The Bloodline (Sikoa, Jacob Fatu, Tama Tonga, Tonga Loa) Are featured in the WWE-produced match graphic indicating that The Bloodline will operate under Freebird rules for the bout.

Jimmy and Jey reunited on last Friday’s SmackDown after more than a year of storyline strife as they interfered on behalf of Motor City Machine Guns in their Tag Team title bout against The Bloodline.

Seven matches are now set for Saturday’s PLE in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The pre-show will begin at 11 a.m. Eastern time with the main card beginning at 1 p.m. Eastern time on Saturday, November 2.

The updated PPV lineup:

  • WWE Crown Jewel, Saturday, November 2, 1 p.m. Eastern time on Peacock —
  • Crown Jewel Championship: Undisputed WWE Champion Cody Rhodes vs. World Heavyweight Champion Gunther
  • Crown Jewel Championship: WWE Women’s Champion Nia Jax vs. Women’s World Champion Liv Morgan
  • WWE United States Champion LA Knight defends against Andrade & Carmelo Hayes in a triple threat
  • WWE Women’s Tag Team Champions Bianca Belair & Jade Cargill defend against Lash Legend & Jakara Jackson, IYO SKY & Kairi Sane, and Chelsea Green & Piper Niven in a four-way
  • Randy Orton vs. Kevin Owens
  • Seth Rollins vs. Bronson Reed
  • Roman Reigns, Jey Uso & Jimmy Uso vs. The Bloodline (three of Solo Sikoa, Jacob Fatu, Tama Tonga, Tonga Loa)

Randy Orton vs. Kevin Owens, two title matches added to WWE Crown Jewel

Randy Orton vs. Kevin Owens, plus Women’s Tag Team and United States title matches have been added to WWE Crown Jewel.

Orton opened Friday’s WWE SmackDown by calling out Paul “Triple H” Levesque and demanding a match with Owens at Crown Jewel set for next Saturday, November 2.

Triple H declined Orton’s offer noting that this version of Owens is different and more dangerous than any Orton has faced before. Orton insisted, and Triple H relented, making the match for the PLE official.

The United States Championship will also be on the line at Crown Jewel in a triple threat match.

US Champion LA Knight was the guest referee for the finale of the best-of-seven series between Andrade and Carmelo Hayes on Friday’s SmackDown, with the match ending in a no contest after Knight hit both competitors with his BFT finisher. SmackDown GM Nick Aldis made the triple threat official later in the show.

Bianca Belair and Jade Cargill will also defend their Women’s Tag Team titles at Crown Jewel in a four-way.

Aldis, Raw GM Adam Pearce, and NXT GM Ava announced a fatal four-way title match for Crown Jewel in a backstage segment on Friday’s SmackDown, with Belair and Cargill defending against NXT’s Lash Legend and Jakara Jackson, IYO SKY and Kairi Sane, and Chelsea Green and Piper Niven.

The updated Crown Jewel lineup:

WWE Crown Jewel, Saturday, November 2, 1 p.m. Eastern time on Peacock —

  • Crown Jewel Championship: Undisputed WWE Champion Cody Rhodes vs. World Heavyweight Champion Gunther
  • Crown Jewel Championship: WWE Women’s Champion Nia Jax vs. Women’s World Champion Liv Morgan
  • WWE United States Champion LA Knight defends against Andrade & Carmelo Hayes in a triple threat
  • WWE Women’s Tag Team Champions Bianca Belair & Jade Cargill defend against Lash Legend & Jakara Jackson, IYO SKY & Kairi Sane, and Chelsea Green & Piper Niven in a four-way
  • Randy Orton vs. Kevin Owens
  • Seth Rollins vs. Bronson Reed

Seth Rollins vs. Bronson Reed added to WWE Crown Jewel

Seth Rollins and Bronson Reed will go one-on-one at WWE Crown Jewel.

After they brawled throughout the arena to kick off Monday’s WWE Raw, it was announced that Rollins and Reed will square off at the Crown Jewel PLE set for Saturday, November 2.

Reed attacked Rollins on Raw in August to put him out of action for several weeks. Rollins then returned on the September 30 Raw and cost Reed his Last Monster Standing match against Braun Strowman.

A face-to-face between the two was advertised for Monday’s Raw, then Raw GM Adam Pearce made the match for Crown Jewel official after the arena brawl.

Three matches have been announced for Crown Jewel. The lineup so far:

WWE Crown Jewel, Saturday, November 2, 1 p.m. Eastern time on Peacock —

  • Crown Jewel Championship: Undisputed WWE Champion Cody Rhodes vs. World Heavyweight Champion Gunther
  • Crown Jewel Championship: WWE Women’s Champion Nia Jax vs. Women’s World Champion Liv Morgan
  • Seth Rollins vs. Bronson Reed

Two champion vs. champion matches official for WWE Crown Jewel

The first two matches are set for the Saturday, November 2 WWE Crown Jewel event in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

As first revealed during Saturday’s Bad Blood PLE, two champion versus champion matches between the top men’s and women’s singles title holders in WWE are set for Crown Jewel. The winners of the matches will be crowned the first-ever WWE Crown Jewel Champions.

It was officially announced during Monday’s Raw that those bouts will feature Undisputed WWE Champion Cody Rhodes vs. World Heavyweight Champion Gunther, and Women’s World Champion Liv Morgan vs. WWE Women’s Champion Nia Jax.

Morgan and Jax retained their titles with wins at Bad Blood last Saturday to cement their matchup. Gunther retained his World Heavyweight title on Monday’s Raw in the main event with a victory over Sami Zayn to make the Gunther vs. Rhodes bout official. Rhodes and Gunther then had a brief staredown to close Raw.

The lineup to this point for WWE Crown Jewel streaming live on Peacock/WWE Network on Saturday, November 2:

  • Inaugural WWE Crown Jewel Championship match: Undisputed WWE Champion Cody Rhodes vs. World Heavyweight Champion Gunther
  • Inaugural WWE Women’s Crown Jewel Championship match: WWE Women’s Champion Nia Jax vs. Women’s World Champion Liv Morgan

WWE to crown first Crown Jewel Champions next month

At Bad Blood on Saturday night, Paul “Triple H” Levesque made an appearance for what WWE said would be a historic announcement.

Levesque revealed that — at Crown Jewel in Saudi Arabia next month — the first-ever Crown Jewel Champions will be determined. There will be singles matches pitting the WWE Champion against the World Champion in both the men’s and women’s division. While none of their championships will be on the line, the winners will be awarded the Crown Jewel titles for 2024.

Levesque said this will become the annual theme of Crown Jewel with the top champions of the men’s and women’s divisions facing off to determine that year’s Crown Jewel champs.

“50 carats of diamonds that will signify the winner as the best of the best,” Levesque said after unveiling the Crown Jewel title belt.

Crown Jewel 2024 is being held in Riyadh on Saturday, November 2. If there are no title changes before then, these Crown Jewel Championship matches would be Cody Rhodes vs. Gunther and Nia Jax vs. Liv Morgan.

WWE reveals date for Crown Jewel 2024

WWE has already confirmed when its next show in Saudi Arabia will be taking place.

On Saturday, WWE King & Queen of the Ring was held in Jeddah. It was announced during the broadcast that Crown Jewel 2024 will take place from Riyadh on Saturday, November 2. The event is set to stream live on Peacock/WWE Network.

Aside from 2020 (due to the COVID-19 pandemic), Crown Jewel has taken place every year since 2018. WWE entered into a long-term deal with the Saudi government that year, receiving an estimated $50 million for every show it holds in the country. WWE currently holds two shows per year in Saudi Arabia.

During an earnings call earlier this month, TKO executive Mark Shapiro said WWE still has a “very, very strong relationship” with Saudi Arabia despite Vince McMahon no longer being involved with the company. Shapiro credited WWE President Nick Khan for maintaining the relationship.

Saudi Arabia is hoping to host either WrestleMania or the Royal Rumble in 2026 or 2027.

Here’s an updated look at WWE’s PLE schedule for the remainder of 2024. The full schedule has not been announced yet.

  • Saturday, June 15: Clash at the Castle (Glasgow, Scotland)
  • Saturday, July 6: Money in the Bank (Toronto, Canada)
  • Saturday, August 3: SummerSlam (Cleveland, Ohio)
  • Saturday, August 31: Bash in Berlin (Berlin, Germany)
  • Saturday, November 2: Crown Jewel (Riyadh, Saudi Arabia)