History of the WWE Championship | Part 7 | Rated R

Now it’s 2005 WWE has just been sitting on Edge, Randy Orton, Batista, Jeff Hardy, and John Cena for a while. Pushing long-term prospect JBL to the top worked… sort of… probably in Vince McMahon’s mind anyway, so it was time for them to shove a bunch of other home grown prospects in our face. Also Rob Van Dam because it was time to squeeze every penny possible out of this ECW thing they’d purchased. 

April 3, 2005 – Los Angeles, California

John Cena def. John Bradshaw Layfield {WWE Championship Match}
From WrestleMania 21. As a championship match, this was very pedestrian. Not bad, but I’ll say it’s a good thing that it wasn’t the main event. JBL’s boredom is undeterred by the importance (and in hindsight the historical significance) of the moment. Cena got the win at 11:18 to pick up his first of so many titles. **½ 

January 8, 2006 – Albany, New York

Edge def. John Cena {WWE Championship Match}
From the second New Year’s Revolution. This is hardly a match, as Cena was bloody and half dead after defending his title in an Elimination Chamber match (back when those still sort of seemed important), and Edge cashed in the first Money in the Bank contract. This was Edge’s first championship win, and I hate that he won it this way. Even more than that, I hate that a few other wrestlers would go on to win their first championships this way. That said, at least Cena got a couple chances to kick out, so the crowd got to have a little hope that he’d pull out a miracle before Edge pinned him at 1:41. N/A

January 29, 2006 – Miami Florida

John Cena def. Edge {WWE Championship Match}
From the 19th Royal Rumble. The finish here made Edge look like a chump who wasn’t in Cena’s league. That logically paired well with the way he won the title, but it didn’t give him any credibility. The rest of the match was good enough, and finally gave me something entertaining to watch after a mess of JBL trash. The storyline was stupid though, as it was Edge’s attempt to not be called a transitional champion, but winning the title from and losing it to the same guy isn’t a transition, it’s just a distraction. Cena won in 14:02. ***

June 11, 2006 – New York, New York

Rob Van Dam def. John Cena {WWE Championship Extreme Rules Match}
From the second One Night Stand. The Second Night Stand. RVD was also cashing in his Money in the Bank contract here, but he called his shot ahead of time which made him look tough. This was really cool. The crowd was more into this than anything else on the show, and that’s saying something. Cena was in control for a LOT of the match, falling behind whenever he let the crowd get to him. It was cool to see him wrestle heel, as he knew that he was in big trouble in front of this audience. The action was fun, even if RVD got his ass kicked through a lot of it. Needing Edge and Paul Heyman to help him win didn’t do him a lot of favors, but knowing that he didn’t end up holding the title takes some of the edge off of that sting. He won the title at 20:43 and used the win to resurrect the ECW Championship. ****

July 3, 2006 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Edge def. Rob Van Dam and John Cena {WWE Championship Triple Threat Match}
From Raw 684. The commentary was annoying here too (as it was at the Royal Rumble with all that Edge is a transitional champion crap), as they kept calling Cena controversial when really he was just straight up unpopular compared to RVD. The controversial tag really didn’t work outside of the ECW setting, where Cena was squeaky clean, just not well revered. I wish this had been how Edge won his first title. Yes, it’s a bit of a bummer that RVD had to lose the belt because of legal troubles, but this was a more convincing, if still conniving, way for Edge to win the belt. He stole the pin from Cena on RVD at 8:25 (shown of 11:25), and it came after a really fun triple threat match. ***½ 

September 17, 2006 – Toronto, Ontario

John Cena def. Edge {WWE Championship Tables, Ladders, and Chairs Match}
From the eighth Unforgiven. Well that was dope. It had crazy spots, incredibly hard work, and an insane crowd that basically wanted to see Cena die. I still don’t like the word controversial to describe him (what’s the controversy, exactly?) but he was clearly despised outside of the American Northeast and not just compared to RVD. I like that they didn’t switch face/heel rolls to accommodate the crowd because that more or less turned the crowd heel, which I loved. Normally, I like a ladder match to be a bit more about trying to win than trying to pop the crowd, but these guys hated each other at this point (Edge had assaulted Cena’s father), so it stood to reason that they’d want to beat the piss out of each other. Cena grabbed the belt at 25:28. ****½ 

October 7, 2007 – Rosemont, Illinois

Triple H def. Randy Orton {WWE Championship Match}
From the ninth No Mercy. After carrying the title for over a year, Cena got a booboo on his boob and had to vacate the championship. Orton was awarded the title by forfeit because he was supposed to face Cena in a Last Man Standing match here (I think that’s the only time in WWE history that this title has changed hands by forfeit) and Triple H immediately challenged him here. As annoyed as I am that Orton’s first WWE Championship was won by forfeit, I’m even more annoyed that they put on this slightly above average opener just to pad the stats for both guys. They couldn’t just do the main event over the vacant title and have Orton win outright? What an over-complicated mess, which also included a Triple H vs. Umaga match that nobody asked for. Triple H won at 11:06. ***

Randy Orton def. Triple H {WWE Championship Last Man Standing Match}
So yeah, Triple H gets beat up by, but defeats, Umaga in the interim and then has to have the schedules LMS match against Orton in the main event. The first two thirds of this match were the kind of Last Man Standing match I can’t stand, wherein they hit a spot then wait for a count over and over again. Then, Triple H started bleeding and they picked up the pace a lot going into the finish. This got very strong marks when it happened, but doesn’t hold up in the face of stronger matches with the same stipulation since. Orton kept Triple H down for ten at 20:25. ***½ 

April 27, 2008 – Baltimore, Maryland

Triple H def. Randy Orton, John Cena, and John Bradshaw Layfield {WWE Championship Four Way Elimination Match}
From the 10th Backlash. How is it possible that JBL was the best part of this match? He subverted annoying elimination match errors, utilizing the rules of the match to his advantage in a fun way. Then he and Cena got eliminated rather early and we got another good but far from great Triple H vs. Orton match. That’s really irritating. Triple H won the title back at 28:12. ***

November 23, 2008 – Boston, Massachusetts

Edge def. Triple H and Vladimir Kozlov {WWE Championship Triple Threat Match}
From the 22nd annual Survivor Series. It was pretty cruel of them to have us endure thirteen minutes of Triple H vs. Kozlov one-on-one after taking Jeff Hardy out of the match before Edge entered the fray with a minute to go. The crowd was totally dead for all of it; for good reason too, it was terrible. Like, the worst WWE title change of all time-level terrible. Even the way that Vicky Guerrero shoe horned Edge into the match at the end was lame. Then, Jeff Hardy came out to attack Edge but hit Triple H by mistake, giving Edge the win. Total crap. If Hardy was well enough to do what he did at the end there, he was well enough to be taken out before the match in front of the crowd by Edge and for Edge to be in the entire match. Kozlov was incapable of handling the spot he was given, and a third party was needed to cover for him. And not only that, the momentum was clearly behind Hardy winning the title, but this made it look like Triple H wanted to do to Hardy what Steve Austin did to him back at SummerSlam ’99 and have a transitional, repeat champion be the one to do the job instead of him. Just garbage on every level, from performance to politics to straight up bad creative decisions. Edge won at 14:22. ½*

December 14, 2008 – Buffalo, New York

Jeff Hardy def. Edge and Triple H {WWE Championship Triple Threat Match}
From the ninth Armageddon. There was a lot of starting and stopping in this one. Much of the action was fun, and Hardy’s win was over as hell, but it took forever to set up the (admittedly cool) announce table spot. Plus all the overbooking was pointless and didn’t lead to anything. What is up with the booking at the end of 2008? Hardy finally got his hands on the WWE Championship at 17:19. ***½ 

January 25, 2009 – Detroit, Michigan

Edge def. Jeff Hardy {WWE Championship No Disqualification Match}
From the 22nd Royal Rumble. At this point it’s safe to call Jeff Hardy’s run at this title a blank bullet. This match was alright, but the overbooking involving Vickie & Chavo Guerrero made Matt Hardy’s eventual heel turn feel less important. It also muddled Jeff’s character, as he followed Matt’s lead by going for a killer ConChairTo, which is far too much a heel maneuver for the defending babyface to be participating in. Further, all the huge spots in this match revolved around Chavo, so they didn’t even factor into the title contenders’ efforts to win. This whole era has been a bummer. Edge got the title back and pretty much ended Hardy’s time in the main event at 19:22. **¾ 

February 15, 2009 – Seattle, Washington

Triple H def. Edge, Jeff Hardy, The Big Show, The Undertaker, and Vladimir Kozlov {WWE Championship Elimination Chamber Match}
From the 10th No Way Out. Tazz on commentary called Kozlov undefeated in singles competition going into this, but I just watched a garbage title match that he lost. Anyway, this was the sixth Chamber match, the second for this title, and the first time the WWE Championship changed hands in such a match. And it was pretty dope. You had the champion being eliminated first, which got the crowd all riled up. Even when Kozlov was alone in there with Hardy the action was less dreadful than I was fearing. Hardy, to the surprise of no one, makes a better underdog than Triple H. I could have done without the slow bit where Kozlov and Show took turns beating him up though. Things didn’t really pick back up until Kozlov was eliminated, and we had to sit through a slog with five guys in the ring before that happened. But once he was out of there the action picked way up, and the final bit between Undertaker and Triple H was a wild ride. I do have to question the legality of stopping a count for a foot on the ropes in an Elimination Chamber match. Triple H won the title at 35:55, beginning his final run with it for half a decade. ****

It’s true that Triple H pushed himself into the mix with the fresher main event talent, but that came to an end here as he began to transition more of his time to his backstage duties. And as we’ll see in the next part of this series, that gave Cena and Orton the opportunity to juice their championship stats.