Showing posts with label Cesaro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cesaro. Show all posts

Recap: Royal Rumble 2015

Man oh man!

The Royal Rumble. What can you say? It's taken over the internet the last couple days, unfortunately for the wrong reasons. The hashtag #CancelWWENetwork went viral and was trending all over the world. Everyone was up in arms and by the reactions, some people might have thought a high government official had been assassinated. But alas, it wasn't as traumatic or serious as that. It was, professional wrestling.

Wrestling fans are loyal and emotional, sometimes as we've seen, on a unreal level. But I guess that is what a fan is right? Fanatical. The Royal Rumble proved just how fanatical wrestling fans can get, but before we get to the main event of the night that set twitter ablaze, had people booing their heads off, and even had the Rock wondering what the hell was going on, let's talk about the precursor matches.


In the kick-off show we saw two member of New Day take on Cesaro and Tyson Kidd, who had Adam Rose in their corner. The match was okay, but what many people were talking about were the shirts Cesaro and Rose were wearing. Apparently the "Brass Ring Club" may or may not be a personal motto between the three unlikely allies, and both Rose and Cesaro came out with a parody shirt of the Bullet Club, made famous now through NJPW. Replacing the skull, machine guns, and bullets for the Brass Ring Club was a cat skull with ears, two Swiss crosses on the sides and two long stemmed roses. It was actually pretty cool. I really hope Cesaro "proves" he's over, because in my book he already is.


The Usos went on to defeat The Miz and Mizdow. Not much to say about this match, but Mizdow continues to impress. The fans really like him, but I have a sneaking suspicion that even when he splits from Miz, they'll have a match or two, but then "creative" will have nothing for him, which is horrible.

The Bella Twins beat Paige and Natalya, which only had a couple good spots. I wish Paige would get back into a good story line, whether it's for the title or not. Preferably for the title. Every time Nikki Bella holds that title up, it just seems like one of those things where someone had a championship or what not, but you know they shouldn't. But they are holding it up to prove to everyone that they do. I can almost hear the words "Nah-uh, I'm the champion. See!! I have the title, see! I'm the champion." That's the feeling I get. She's good, so maybe she just needs to change her demeanor/attitude.

The Ascension defeated the New Age Outlaws, in a match I think was there to show that the Ascension are good, but I'm still not buying them. I've been watching them since NXT, and I wasn't buying them there either. I don't think they are gonna work. Hopefully they can get something else with either different tag team partners and single story lines.

The World Championship match came right before the rumble, and wow! Man, this match was great. It got great buzz on social media from everyone, whether they were in WWE or not. I tweeted that no matter the outcome of the rumble, that match was worth the 9.99 for the network.

Brock Lesnar is a beast. plain and simple. His nickname as the Beast Incarnate has never been so apropos as these last few matches he's had and he did it again at the Royal Rumble. He's a monster. He's a suplex machine. And ever since that Undertaker match at WrestleMania 30, every match he's had he's just looked dominant.

For all the boos and all the haters and every person out there that says "I respect him, I just don't like him", John Cena is the man. And not the man in the sense as the face of the company and all that, even though he is. I mean he's the man in the sense that he puts it all on the line, every match and you gotta give him props for that. He went through barricades at the rumble and threw stairs around and took a boatload suplex's yet again and he still put on a great show.

And Seth Rollins. I'm buying in on Seth Rollins. If this wasn't his coming out party to the top players in the WWE, it was damn close. Jumping off the top rope with knees to Lesnar and Cena, that amazing Phoenix Splash on Cena and Oh. My. God. That top turnbuckle elbow drop on Lesnar over the spanish announce table (why is it always the spanish announce table?). Rollins proved that he definitely is in the main event scene, and as he puts it, the future of the WWE.


Finally we had the Royal Rumble.

Okay, while I felt the end was definitely lack-luster, I did not jump on the #CancelWWENetwork bandwagon. I like the network. I like the countdowns, and I'm always browsing through the documentaries. But yes, they could have had a little more drama to end the match.

Daniel Bryan. We all knew he wasn't going to win, but it felt like he got eliminated as just another guy. Some more story and drama could have been utilized. Anything other than just being bounced off the apron.

The guest spots were pretty cool. Bubba Ray Dudley making a come back was cool for sure and it was awesome watching DDP nail some diamond cutters on people. One thing I wasn't thrilled with was the Boogey Man taking a spot. I get it, he was a crazy scary guys going up against Bray Wyatt, supposedly another crazy scary guy. But I thought they could have given that spot to someone else. Maybe even Sami Zayne or Adrian Neville from NXT. Last year the NXT guy was Rusev, so I was hoping at least one person from NXT would show up. But nope.

While not disappointing, a little bit of a head scratcher was Kofi Kingston's "rumble spot" this year. Kofi's become an attraction at every rumble the last few years, with interesting predicaments on how to get back in the match without being eliminated. Granted, it's hard to come up with these spots, but this year we saw him sort of crowd surf the rosebuds around one part of the ring and get put back in. Kind of "meh".

It was cool that The Rock came out to help Roman Reigns for a moment, the last thing that really disappointed me was the way Dolph Ziggler, Ryback, Bray Wyatt and Dean Ambrose were eliminated. No drama. No tension. Just Big Show and Kane laying waste and quite literally simply dumping them over the top rope. Come on WWE!!  Give us a little more story and drama then that! I get it, you want to show them unstoppable for Reigns to try and look heroic, but while you're making one guy look like a hero, you're making the other main event players look like chumps.

So, yes, while the Royal Rumble match itself was a bit under-whelming, I still keep thinking about the championship match and it reminds me that there are still great matches to be had and stories to be told. And even if Roman Reigns is rumored/scheduled to be the man in the future, I'm not hitching my horse to that wagon. Make mine Seth Rollins.

#IBelieveInSethRollins

Stone Cold and Vince McMahon


After Raw went off the air last night, Stone Cold held his podcast, live on the WWE Network, interviewing the owner of WWE, Vince McMahon. Here are a few thoughts I had from the podcast.

First off, I'm glad Austin covered everything I think that is on the minds of wrestling fans. Not only CM Punk, but about pushing guys, Macho Man's HOF status, and others. When the podcast started it seemed to me Vince had a little trepidation, almost like he was unsure what Austin was going to ask him and didn't want to be blind-sided. After about 20 minutes or so, I felt like his nerves calmed a little and he felt more easy. That's not to say I thought he was nervous, again, just he didn't want to be blind-sided by Austin.

Austin started talking about pro wrestling versus sports entertainment, and Vince kind of cut him off, disagreeing that Austin didn't come from "pro wrestling". Vince said pro wrestling was what his dad did, and that he does sports entertainment. While I see the argument there, I do have to agree with Stone Cold. I'm sure we can go back longer, but my first thought was of Andy Kaufman and Jerry Lawler. They were going at each other and it was called pro wrestling. Was there entertainment there? Of course, they appeared on Letterman for crying out loud, but no one called it sports entertainment back then. There's always been entertainment in it, again, thinking about Gorgeous George and him strutting around the ring, playing to the crowd. So I agreed with Austin about that.

Getting back to the point though, Austin said it seemed like the wrestlers are walking around backstage on eggshells. We've heard that before from others. Vince called out the locker room, saying it's a different generation, and not as ambitious as previous generations of wrestlers. It'll be interesting to see how the talent reacts to that. Seth Rollins already did, posting on twitters



Austin commented that they have to go out on a limb for success. Great advice, not just for wwe superstars, but anyone, in any field, trying to gain momentum and break through.

Macho Man's hall of fame status was asked point blank. Vince gave a straight answer "Yes". It was a funny moment because Austin didn't really follow up with another question or point, he just let that answer linger in the air, staring at Vince, to which Vince asked "Why are you looking at me like that?". Austin stared and asked him again in a way as if to say "Bro, settle with me, man to man, is he going in?", and Vince said he will be in the hall of fame. Maybe not this year, but he'll be there. So there's that.

Cesaro's name came up. Vince complimented Cesaro and thought he does great work, but when asked by Austin what's keeping him back, Vince said he lacks a little charisma and doesn't quite have that "it factor" yet. I think a lot would disagree. He was getting over with the crowd a lot, especially with the "king of swing" gimmick and then they squashed it, putting him with Heyman and now by himself. I hope Cesaro is able to do something that changes Vince's mind.

Austin then turned the attention to CM Punk, asking Vince if he wanted to talk about him or the situation. Vince didn't side step the question, and though he did say he didn't want to air dirty laundry he address the situation, saying a big part of the problem was probably a lack of communication, which from the Art of Wrestling podcast with Colt Cabana, it sound about right.

Austin said that lack of communication was one of, if not the biggest problem when he walked out on the company for eight months. Vince did offer an apology to Punk about the termination papers on his wedding day and said that was nothing but coincidence. That I don't think I'm buying. Maybe, MAYBE, Vince didn't know about that, but there's no way anyone can convince me that didn't happen on purpose.

One of the last things that kind of peaked my interest was Austin asking about Brock and where he was. Vince said he didn't think Brock needed to be there every week, because that title is a special attraction. Man, whoever sold that line or gimmick to Vince should get a raise. I disagree with some of that. Does that champ need to be there every week. I'd say no. Does that champ need to defend every ppv. I'd also say no to that. But not being on television or the ppv events month after month? I don't think that's best for business. He's a special attraction, treat him like one. Have him ringside for a number one contenders match. Make a special appearance on a couple T.V. events. But to not hear anything from him for over two months, and with TLC coming in just a couple weeks, looks to be over three months soon, I think it hurts the title. Just my opinion.

Anyways, I enjoyed the podcast, and enjoy most of Steve Austin's other podcasts over on Podcast One. Who knows if Vince will do another interview like that in the near future, so it was cool to get his feedback and views on things.