Thursday, 31 March 2016

25 Most Revealing WWE Instagram Posts Of The Week (March 27th)

Republished from Whatculture

Another week, another set of massive wrestling related questions: will John Cena appear at WrestleMania in some capacity? Might he be hauled in to interrupt a match and set up his return feud? And who the hell buys his suits?
The week also saw the tease of Randy Orton’s return, though he too will miss Mania, which is ominously looking like a main event lacking real headline weight. And while the persistent rumours that the brand split is coming back to save the day are very welcome, there’s a slight feeling that the showcase needs to just get out of the way for a big reset.
There’s also been whispers of discontent from former stars looking to sue over the Network’s replacement of DVDs (and removal of royalties), and Hulk Hogan was awarded another $25m in damages in the Gawker case. Lifetime must be chomping at the bit to make that into a movie.
And through it all, of course, the roster talent and former stars took to social media to show off their ‘Mania muscles and beach bods without a care in the world.
This is the week in WWE Instagram…

Wednesday, 30 March 2016

Should You Subscribe to the WWE Network?

Republished from NDTV

Should You Subscribe to the WWE Network?

For a technology site, we spend a lot of time thinking about wrestling. Perhaps that's because the nature of wrestling makes it appealing to geeks in the exact same way that spec battles between phones are. Some of you probably grew up with WWE - or WWF as it was called back then - trading cards, and can recite Hulk Hogan's stats even today. The company also has a highly successful digital video platform called the WWE Network - think of it as Netflix but only for wrestling. It costs $9.99 (approximately Rs. 666) per month to subscribe, and you get access to round the clock scheduled programming, and a huge library of video on demand content that you can stream. The WWE Network launched in India last month, and like any fan would, we signed up to see if it's worth our time.
The first month is free, though you have to give your credit card details to sign-up, and you'll be charged at the end of the month if you want to continue to access the WWE Network. There are no restrictions on the first free month, so you can get a good taste of what the WWE Network is all about, and for the hardcore fans, there's a lot on offer.

Tuesday, 29 March 2016

10 Things WWE Got Right In WrestleMania 32 Season

Republished from Whatculture

wwe.com
(Source: WWE.com)

The 2016 WrestleMania season has been heavily criticised, with many of the failures all too obvious. But while it is easy to take shots at Vince McMahon’s mistakes, too few people are giving him credit for what he did get right.
There’s been numerous things that WWE did do well in this January to April period, including the enhancement of several talents. It is just unfortunate that the one guy they should have been enhancing, Roman Reigns, ended up being less over than he was at the start of the period.
There’s also been things in this last few months that were simply out of WWE’s control. Yes, WrestleMania 32 is looking like one of the weaker megashows in recent memory, but in large parts WWE have had rotten luck with their planning. And yet they still managed to get some things spectacularly right.
As things stand right now, the April 3 special is an eleven match extravaganza, with seven of the matches on the main show. The four main events, Triple H versus Roman Reigns, Shane McMahon versus The Undertaker, and Dean Ambrose versus Brock Lesnar will be what makes or breaks the show. Has the build been perfect?
Far from it, but WWE did do several things that made WrestleMania season a lot of fun.

Monday, 28 March 2016

7 Big Things Shane McMahon Could Do To Shake Up WWE

Republished from Whatculture

WWE.com
Image Source: WWE.com

After six years away from the WWE, Shane McMahon has returned! He’s a little grayer, a little heavier, and a bit slower, but not slow enough to shuffle his way out to the ring for a match with The Undertaker! It’s the battle of the 51-year-old man with a bad hip and the 46-year-old son of the owner at WrestleMania. Okay, so if I can stop being cynical for a moment, the match is at least fresh, intriguing, and contains huge storyline ramifications.
The fate of Monday Night Raw hangs in the balance. If Shane wins, he gets to run WWE’s flagship show however he sees fit, which would hopefully bring forth some massive changes. The product badly needs a boost, and perhaps Shane O’Mac can be the one to deliver.
It’s still unclear if the prodigal son will have any actual power behind-the-scenes. But if he does defeat The Deadman at Mania, the company is likely to at least make some bold on-air moves to make it feel like a new era has truly begun.
There are a lot of things that fans have been clamoring for, whether it be a change in the booking philosophy, or a host of new talent joining the fold, or compelling storylines for the mid-card. This is a chance for the company to excite the fanbase again, and to help stave off a heavy WrestleMania hangover.
Here are seven things that Shane McMahon can do to shake up WWE.

Sunday, 27 March 2016

10 Burning Questions For WWE Raw (March 28)

Republished from Whatculture

WWE.com
(Image Source:WWE.com)

It’s been a long and winding Road to WrestleMania to get to this point, but we are just days away from WWE’s signature event, and anticipation is runnin’ mild. Seriously, is anyone seriously really looking forward to the current card? Sure, there will undoubtedly be good matches and it could be a very passable PPV, but this certainly is not “the biggest WrestleMania of all time.”
In some ways, WWE has been snakebitten this year when it comes to performers. We’ve seen a WrestleMania season decimated by injuries (John Cena, Randy Orton, Seth Rollins, Daniel Bryan, Sting, Cesaro). But we’ve also seen really poor and confusing booking, such as the Intercontinental Championship ladder match (which admittedly might be a good match) and the Shane McMahon/Undertaker bout.
All of that leaves us at the last stop on the Road to WrestleMania, WWE’s last-ditch effort to sell people on the PPV (and by extension, the WWE Network). How hard of a sell will the company put on for fans on Monday Night Raw? The card is pretty well established by now – for better or worse – so unless there’s a new wrinkle to throw into one of the bouts, this could be a sound-and-fury, status-quo episode of Raw. Sure, there might be a lot of stuff happening, but not much will be different at 11pm EST than it was at 8pm.
With that said, let’s take a look at the big questions that remain on the table and hopefully will be answered in some fashion on Monday night…

Wednesday, 23 March 2016

WWE Raw Viewership Slips 2 Weeks Before WrestleMania 32

Republished from Whatculture

WWE.com
( Image Source: WWE.com)

During the tie of the year when you would most expect WWE’s ratings to start peaking, we are seeing their viewership slip each and every week.
This week, for the fourth consecutive week, the RAW viewership was down compared to the previous week. The March 21st edition of WWE RAW averaged 3.400 million viewers, down from last week’s broadcast which averaged 3.458 million viewers.
The hourly viewership breakdown this week was as follows:
First Hour: 3.466 million viewers (3.471 million viewers last week)
Second Hour: 3.416 million viewers (3.392 million viewers last week)
Third Hour: 3.317 million viewers (3.510 million viewers last week)
After a rare instance last week where the third hour was the most watched portion of the broadcast, we returned to the usual trend this week of viewers tuning out throughout the show, making the third hour the least watched. The main event of Dean Ambrose versus Braun Strowman did little to hold the audience through the main event segment.
RAW finished Monday night as the second most watched show on cable. It was once again edged out by The O’Reilly Factor on FOX News (3.423 million viewers). The WWE RAW ratings earned the show second place for Monday night on cable in the 18-49 demographic, with Love And Hip Hop 6 coming in first place.

Tuesday, 22 March 2016

A Nerdy Conversation With Former WWE Writer Freddie Prinze Jr. (Yes, That Freddie!) About WrestleMania

Republished from gq

Freddie-Prinz-Steve-Austin.jpg

The '90s heartthrob sits down for the GQ+A for a granular and fascinating discussion about the state of modern wrestling.
The best-kept secret in professional wrestling isn't who was in on the Montreal Screwjob or whether Hulk Hogan and Mr. America were really the same person. It's actually that on two separate occasions, Freddie Prinze Jr. wrote and produced for WWE television. Yes, that Freddie Prinze Jr. So in the lead up to WrestleMania, we sat down with your favorite actor from the '90s to find out how these stories are even told in the first place, plus what he thinks of the current WWE landscape.

GQ: Please explain to me how a big-name Hollywood actor ends up working for the WWE?
Freddie Prinze Jr: I think it was 2007 or 2008. I don't remember the exact year, but I went to WrestleMania and I was speaking with a lady who worked for the company. She was asking what I liked about the show, what I didn't like, and I was just very honest with her. She said, "I would love for you to have this conversation with Kevin Dunn or Stephanie McMahon (1).

Monday, 21 March 2016

7 Reasons WWE Must Change WrestleMania 32’s Main Event To A Fatal 4 Way

Republished from Whatculture

triple h roman reigns

Emerging from the Monday Night Raw entrance stage instead of through the live crowd, Roman Reigns surveyed the scene before making his way to the ring. Inside the squared circle, Triple H was fresh from a match against Dolph Ziggler, but looked ready to fight his chief rival. 
Initially, fan response seemed largely favourable. There were screams of delight upon seeing Reigns, mainly from females, but all that would change once the top contender for the WWE World Heavyweight Title made his way into the ring. Upending ‘The Game’, Reigns began landing blow after blow to the champion. As if by magic, any cheering disappeared, replaced by noticeable booing from the crowd.
This is a major problem, and it’s one many have foreseen over the past number of months. WWE’s core fan base just doesn’t see Roman Reigns as the top babyface in the company, regardless of how much management would like them to.
Over in one of WWE’s other main feuds, Dean Ambrose and Brock Lesnar appear to be heating up to a solid Street Fight come WrestleMania 32. Is there a case to be made that those men would greatly help ‘Mania’s WWE Title main event? If nothing else, they’d add some much needed balance to what is a potentially disastrous situation for WWE.

Saturday, 19 March 2016

WrestleMania 32

Republished from Wikipedia



WrestleMania 32 will be the thirty-second annual WrestleMania professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by WWE. It will take place on April 3, 2016, at AT&T Stadium in ArlingtonTexas.


Production

Background

WrestleMania is considered WWE's flagship event,[1] having been described as the Super Bowl of sports entertainment.[2]
On January 20, 2015, WWE announced that WrestleMania 32 would be held at the AT&T Stadium in the city of Arlington on April 3, 2016.[3] On October 13, travel packages for WrestleMania 32 went on sale, which included tickets to WrestleMania, hotel room accommodation, and other activities includingWrestleMania Axxess, the NXT TakeOver: Dallas, the 2016 WWE Hall of Fameceremony, and the next Raw; the cheapest package cost $575 per person.[4]On November 6, individual tickets went on sale through Ticketmaster, with prices ranging from $18 to $1,180.[4] WrestleMania will be available for free to new subscribers on WWE's monthly subscription service, the WWE Network.[5]
The event will be the third WrestleMania to be held in the state of Texas after 2001 and 2009, and the first to take place in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex area.[6] There are five official theme songs for the event, "My House" by Flo Rida, "Hello Friday" by Flo Rida featuring Jason Derulo, "Hail to the King" by Avenged Sevenfold, "Sympathy for the Devil" by Motörheadand "Oh No" by Goodbye June.
Forbes has speculated that WrestleMania 32 could break the WWE wrestling attendance record of 93,173 set atWrestleMania III at the Pontiac Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan. This record stood as the highest attendance for any indoor event until the 2010 NBA All-Star Game, also held at AT&T Stadium, drew 108,713.[7]
CNET wrote that WrestleMania 32 will feature the "culmination" of "the biggest story in WWE", which is "establishing Roman Reigns as the top babyface, the protagonist who will be the face of the company for -- if WWE has its way -- the next decade." "For the past two years, WWE has been moving heaven and earth" in an attempt to get Reigns to the "level of recognition" of "names like Hulk HoganStone Cold Steve AustinThe Rock and John Cena", but "its toughest opponent" is the "wrestling audience" which started a "fan rebellion" in opposition to WWE's support of Reigns, with fans preferring Dean Ambrose instead.[8] To combat this trend, WWE has taken measures including muting booing crowds and piping in cannedcheers during Reigns' appearances in 2016.[9][10] The A.V. Club concurred that "WWE has a serious Roman Reigns problem", due to "basically nobody wanting to see Roman Reigns in the main event" of WrestleMania.[11]

Storylines

WrestleMania 32 will feature professional wrestling matches that involve wrestlers from pre-existing scripted feuds orstorylines that play out on WWE television. Wrestlers will portray heroes or villains as they follow a series of events that build tension and culminate in a wrestling match or series of matches.[12][13]
At Survivor Series 2015Roman Reigns won the tournament for the vacant WWE World Heavyweight Championship.[14]Reigns had earlier refused offers by Triple H to join The Authority, which would have automatically placed him in the tournament finals,[15] but Reigns fought in the whole tournament and after his victory, he speared Triple H, who was trying to congratulate him. Sheamus then cashed in his Money in the Bank contract and captured Reigns' title.[14][16] Then, Triple H gave Reigns a title rematch at TLC: Tables, Ladders and Chairs,[17] which Reigns lost due to interference. Post-match, a chair-wielding Reigns attacked Sheamus, Alberto Del Rio, and Rusev, and then also Triple H, who came out to stop Reigns' rampage.[18] The following night on the December 14 Raw, WWE chairman Vince McMahon arranged a title vs. career match between Reigns and Sheamus, which Reigns won to regain the title.[19] After Reigns won yet another title rematch against Sheamus, it was decreed by McMahon that Reigns had to defend his title in the 30-man annual Royal Rumble match at the Royal Rumble event.[20] At the event, Triple H returned as the #30 entrant and eliminated Reigns en route to winning the title.[21] After evaluating each wrestler's performance on the January 25 Raw, The Authority set up the main event of Fastlane,[22] which saw Reigns beating Dean Ambrose and Brock Lesnar in a triple threat match to receive a WrestleMania title shot against Triple H.[23] On the February 22 episode of Raw, Triple H attacked Reigns during the latter's match against Sheamus and beat a bloodied Reigns before delivering a Pedigree onto the steel steps.[24] With Reigns absent due to a storyline injury, Triple H accepted Ambrose's title challenge and defeated Ambrose to retain the title atWWE Roadblock on March 12.[25][26][27] The next night on Raw, after Triple H beat Dolph Ziggler, a returning Reigns assaulted not only Triple H, but also referees and security staff.[11][28]
The night after Fastlane, Vince McMahon presented the inaugural "Vincent J. McMahon Legacy of Excellence" Award to his daughter Stephanie McMahon. As Stephanie was about to accept her award, Shane McMahon returned to WWE for the first time since 2009 to confront his father and sister in regards to the company's status. Vince and Shane discussed the status of Raw and how it was getting run down. Vince then made a deal with Shane that he would gain control of Raw if he could win a match of his choosing. After Shane accepted, Vince named The Undertaker as his opponent and made the match a Hell in a Cell match.[24] The Undertaker returned to Raw the following week to address the match, and said that Shane's blood would be on Vince's hands, not his.[25] On March 14 episode of Raw, Shane confronted The Undertaker and questioned his loyalty to Vince. Undertaker stated that no one, not even Vince can control him. After Shane insulted Undertaker for being one of Vince's "puppets", Undertaker and Shane brawled, ending with Undertaker chokeslamming Shane after Vince pushed Shane towards him. Undertaker then attempted to attack Vince but got away.[28][29]
In the triple threat match at Fastlane, Brock Lesnar had Roman Reigns in a kimura lock submission hold until Dean Ambrose attacked Lesnar with a steel chair; this incapacitated Lesnar long enough for Reigns to beat Ambrose.[23] The next day, before Raw aired, Lesnar attacked Ambrose as he arrived at the arena and Ambrose was taken to the hospital in an ambulance. On RawPaul Heyman issued a challenge to anyone on the roster to face Lesnar at WrestleMania. Ambrose returned in the ambulance to challenge Lesnar to a No Holds Barred Street Fight; Lesnar accepted.[24]
After defeating Becky Lynch controversially at the Royal Rumble to retain her WWE Divas ChampionshipCharlotte was ambushed by a returning Sasha Banks.[21] At Fastlane, Charlotte retained the Divas Championship against Brie Bella, while Lynch and Banks defeated Team B.A.D. (Naomi and Tamina) in a tag team match.[23] The following night after Lynch and Banks' match on Raw, Charlotte informed them that one of the two would face her at WrestleMania for the title.[24] On the February 29 episode of Raw, Lynch and Banks faced each other in a No. 1 Contender's match, but the match ended in adouble pin.[25] A rematch on the following episode of SmackDown ended in a no contest when Charlotte attacked both Lynch and Banks. Subsequently, Charlotte was scheduled to defend her title against both Lynch and Banks in a triple threat match at WrestleMania.[30]
On March 14, it was announced that the third annual André the Giant Memorial Battle Royal was scheduled for WrestleMania. As per tradition, the winner will receive the André the Giant Memorial Trophy.[31] On the March 17 episode ofSmackDownHeath SlaterCurtis AxelAdam Rose and Bo Dallas announced their participation in the match.[32]
On the February 8 episode of Raw, after defeating The New Day and Mark HenryThe Dudley Boyz attacked their teammate The Usos.[33] The following weeks, the two teams attacked each other. On March 14, it was announced that The Usos would face The Dudley Boyz at the event.
At Roadblock, WWE Tag Team Champions The New Day defeated The League of Nations members Sheamus and King Barrett to retain the titles.[27] The following night, The New Day defeated The League of Nations members Alberto Del Rioand Rusev to retain the titles. The League of Nations issued a challenged to The New Day to a match at WrestleMania.[28]On March 15, it was announced that The New Day would face The League of Nations in a 4-on-3 handicap match for theWWE Tag Team Championship.
After walking out on Big Show and Kane during their tag team rematch against The Wyatt Family causing them to lose on February 22 episode of Raw, Ryback became more aggressive by beating his opponents in squash matches. On March 14 episode of Raw after defeating Sin Cara that night, Ryback challenged United States Champion Kalisto to a match for theWWE United States Championship at WrestleMania. On the March 16, in an interview with Michael Cole, Kalisto accepted Ryback's challenge.

Matches

No.MatchesStipulations
1P3rd annual André the Giant Memorial Battle Royal[Note 1]20-man Battle Royal for the André the Giant Memorial Trophy[34]
2Triple H (c) vs. Roman ReignsSingles match for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship[35]
3Shane McMahon vs. The UndertakerHell in a Cell match; if Shane wins, he gains control of Raw[36]
4Dean Ambrose vs. Brock Lesnar (with Paul Heyman)No Holds Barred Street Fight[37]
5Charlotte (c) (with Ric Flair) vs. Becky Lynch vs. Sasha BanksTriple Threat match for the WWE Divas Championship[38]
6The Usos (Jimmy Uso and Jey Uso) vs. The Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudleyand D-Von Dudley)Tag team match[39]
7The New Day (Big EKofi Kingston and Xavier Woods) (c) vs. The League of Nations (SheamusAlberto Del RioRusev and King Barrett)4-on-3 Handicap match for theWWE Tag Team Championship[40]
8Kalisto (c) vs. RybackSingles match for the WWE United States Championship[41]
  • (c) – refers to the champion(s) heading into the match
  • P – indicates the match will take place on the pre-show
  1. Jump up^ Announced participants: Heath SlaterCurtis AxelAdam Rose and Bo Dallas.

Friday, 18 March 2016

WWE Star Returning Soon, Donald Trump - WWE Promo Sounds Familiar, Bray Wyatt, WWE Shop Sale

Republished from WrestlingInc



Yahoo! has an article here looking at WWE Hall of Famer Donald Trump's past with WWE, calling WWE a training ground for the Republican Presidential front-runner. The promo above was referenced from an appearance from Trump on RAW, where Trump sounded a lot like candidate Trump.
"I don't know, Vince, if you've seen the latest poll… I saw the other night, John Travolta, he prefers Trump," Trump said (at the 10:30 mark). "I see others prefer Trump. The poll shows 95% of the Hollywood celebrities want your head shaved and we're going to do it Vince. We're going to do it."
When Vince McMahon replied that 95% "of them are idiots," Trump quipped, "To me, they look like a very smart group of people."

Wednesday, 16 March 2016

Bray Wyatt suffers significant injury

Republished from WrestlingNewsPost


Bray Wyatt, who was scheduled to wrestle Brock Lesnar at WWE Roadblock, is currently dealing with a significant back injury. Thus, the reason that Wyatt did not wrestle Lesnar at the event, but rather Luke Harper did. No word yet on how long he’ll be out of action for.
Wyatt has been plagued by injuries since his NXT days. He’s dealt with a pectoral muscle injury that required surgery and several nagging injuries while on the main roster.
Source: WrestlingObserver.com

Tuesday, 15 March 2016

Have you heard that WWE has a serious Roman Reigns problem?

Republished from Avclub


After Raw last week, the big question was whether or not Roadblock, the Network-only PPV from Toronto that aired on Saturday, would change anything about the plans for Wrestlemania. WWE had done a good job building up Dean Ambrose as a potential winner on Saturday, which would completely change the main event of the big show. Some fantasy booked a Triple Threat match, or perhaps a Fatal Fourway with Brock Lesnar thrown in there. Alas, such fantasies were merely a defense mechanism, a reaction to basically nobody wanting to see Roman Reigns in the main event. Yes, WWE stayed the course at Roadblock, with Triple H walking out as champion.
With all that hype and fantasy booking out of the way, WWE can get back down to business, and Raw wastes no time getting to the action. The first hour of Rawtonight is consistent and simple, which usually makes it good. It’s as if every now and then WWE remembers that they actually have to tell stories and not just throw guys into match after match with the same person and hope that it leads to something interesting. Fresh off beating half of the League of Nation on Saturday, New Day are back to do battle with the other half. They take on Rusev and Alberto Del Rio for the Tag Team titles, and it’s one hell of a match. With Woods on the apron for the match for once, the matchup feels fresh and exciting, and the match itself is fast-paced and fun.

More than that though, the appeal of the nearly 30-minute segment is the fact that New Day’s turning babyface at the perfect time. Their time as obnoxious heels was quickly running out. Crowds were either cheering to much for them—you see that reaction in Toronto on Saturday?—or tuning out their heel shtick. The beauty of the gimmick though is that it doesn’t need to be changed to be a babyface gimmick. The trombone, the colors, the Dave Chappelle references; they all make for a perfect babyface team, and I couldn’t be more excited for a New Day babyface run at the top of the tag division. League of Nations is the perfect foe to move New Day towards babyface stardom too. They get legit heat and all four of those guys can put on great matches. Those seven together could do some magical things.
That’s followed by an Ambrose promo that, while a lot like all of the other Ambrose promos, still signals his rise within the ranks of WWE. He’s operating with renewed urgency for the past few weeks, and it’s absolutely captivating. We’re watching a star being made, one beatdown at a time, one crazy-eyed, angry promo at a time, and it’s remarkable. It’s the type of organic, smart, patient character build that WWE didn’t bother with for Roman Reigns. This is the look of your top babyface. This is the look of a guy who connects to your audience and makes you feel things. He’s out there mouthing off to Brock Lesnar and it isn’t funny, or goofy, or stilted. It feels real and pointed. When Brock and Ambrose are done with their street fight at Wrestlemania, no matter the outcome, one thing is for sure: Ambrose will walk out a star.

After that first hour, Raw kind of goes off a cliff. Or maybe a slight hill, because it’s not nearly as bad as previous weeks, and yet is plagued by the same kind of lackluster storytelling. Sami Zayn and the Miz get in a good little match, but they don’t get nearly enough time to really build much of anything. Is WWE building towards Owens-Zayn at Wrestlemania for the Intercontinental Championship, or is there a multi-man match on the way, with the Miz and Neville potentially filling some spots? Obviously the former would be preferred, but it’s kind of looking like the latter is the safe bet. After all, WWE loves nothing more than sabotaging a hot feud with muti-man matches! After that, Raw is mostly a series of predictableWrestlemania set-up matches. Brie Bella falls prey to the old ringside distraction from Lana and loses her tag match, the Usos absolutely squash Bo Dallas and Adam Rose, and Y2J vs. Neville ends with a potentially real injury to Neville, making the post-match beatdown from AJ Styles on Jericho feel rather rushed and out of place. These are all stories that work on some level, and yet tonight it feels like WWE is just stalling. The matchups are set and it seems like they don’t know what else to do other than kill time until Wrestlemania.

That kind of sluggish, listless feeling extends to the last hour as well. Sure, the hour kicks off with a stunning match between Dolph Ziggler and Triple H, but it’s bogged down by a weird stipulation that ultimately goes nowhere. The idea is that if Ziggler can beat Triple H, he can have any match he wants at Wrestlemaniaother than a match for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship—after all, that’s Roman Reigns’ spot for now and forever, apparently. When Ziggler loses, the stipulation just vanishes, and it’s unclear what the point of it all was. I assumed they’d find a way to put Ziggler in the Shane McMahon spot—and they still might—but alas, Ziggler is back where he was. If we’re looking on the bright side though, it’s nice to see Ziggler in that spot on Raw, and he takes full advantage of it, putting on one hell of a show and showing ONCE AGAIN that he can hang with the talent at the top of the card.
Then, the inevitable happens in two segments and we’re all reminded why we’re not particularly excited for Wrestlemania. First, Roman shows up and beats the ever-loving hell out of Triple H after his match. In fact, he loses it on everyone. He punches refs and security guards before throwing garbage cans at Triple H and then hitting him with a TV backstage. It’s a great version of Roman Reigns, but here’s the thing: who cares anymore? Who cares if he lays a beating on the boss? Who cares if he gets revenge for his broken nose? Who cares about him wanting a shot at the title? The quick answer: just about nobody. Look at the reactions Dolph Ziggler and Dean Ambrose get tonight, and then compare it to the muted reaction from the crowd when the company’s supposedly top babyface makes a surprise return after being off TV for two weeks. WWE has done everything they can to mold and shape circumstances in order to have Roman Reigns get over with the crowd and it’s not working. Not remotely. At this point, the only solution may be to take him away form the World Heavyweight Championship scene for awhile and let him regain some momentum and audience connection in a more organic, meaningful way. You know, after he headlines the biggest wrestling event of the year.

Unfortunately, if you were relying on Shane McMahon and the Undertaker to make up for the black hole that is the Wrestlemania main event, tonight’s segment shows that there’s still a long way to go to make that feud into something compelling. It’s a case of the stipulation within the match being more intriguing than the match itself, and tonight’s in-ring interaction doesn’t make the match look any more appealing. The problem is that WWE has still failed to really explain what this match is about. We know why Shane is back, but why did Vince agree to the match? They mentioned something about a contract and a lockbox, but why not tease that out more? Also, why is Undertaker willingly wrestling for Vince? He’s coming out to the ring, putting his hands on the boss, and saying he only does what he wants to do, but then he turns right around and goes after Shane. What’s his motivation? What’s his end goal? These are questions that don’t need thorough answers, but they need answers nonetheless.
If anything though, WWE is in a fascinating position right now. The two marquee matches at Wrestlemania are shaping up to be absolute trainwrecks, while the mid-card is punching far above its weight. If nothing else, WWE has assured that I’ll keep watching, if only to see how they try and get themselves out of this corner they’ve written themselves into.

Stray observations

  • Results: New Day (c) defeated Rusev and Alberto Del Rio (WWE World Tag Team Championship match); Ryback defeated Sin Cara; Sami Zayn defeated the Miz; Naomi and Tamina defeated Brie Bella and Alicia Fox; The Usos defeated Bo Dallas and Adam Rose; Triple H defeated Dolph Ziggler; Neville defeated Chris Jericho via DQ.
  • Okay, I was kind of stoked to see Mick Foley give his barbed-wire bat to Dean Ambrose.
  • Vince just keeps cutting the exact same promo. We get it, he won’t be your son anymore!
  • I was at Roadblock on Saturday when the arena exploded for Nattie putting a Sharpshooter on Charlotte and then chanted “THIS IS AWESOME” when they put on the match of the night. So, seeing the Lana-Brie feud bringing in Alicia, Tamina, and Naomi made me sad.
  • It’s so easy to get the crowd to cheer for Dolph. Why don’t they do that more often!?!?
  • Hey, it’s Paige! Umm, that’s all.
  • Dear WWE: never, ever, ever give me a Ryback vs. Sin Cara match again.