History of the WWE Championship | Part 8 | Cena Stats

Not much substantively separates the last part of the WWE title’s history and this one, save for Triple H phasing himself out of it once and for all (almost). Also Sheamus and The Miz pop up near the end of this stint and Batista takes a trip over here after spending his main event career fighting for the fake World Championship. Let’s take a look. 

April 26, 2009 – Providence, Rhode Island

Randy Orton, Ted DiBiase Jr & Cody Rhodes def. Triple H, Batista & Shane McMahon {WWE Championship Six Man Tag Match}
From the 11th Backlash. Did the world need another six-man tag team match for the WWE title? This one had fewer convoluted rules than the 2000 version, as only Triple H or Orton could have left as champion. Jerry Lawlor pissed me off by pretending this was the first time this had ever happened when he called color commentary on the other one. Yeah it was a decade earlier, but who could forget something so goofy? Anyway, I know part of the storyline was that Orton had terrorized the McMahons, but how much cooler would this have been if Flair wasn’t retired and he was in there instead of Shane? I’ll give it to Triple H, he sold being worried about his teammates losing his title quite well. A lot of the rest of this was boring. Batista and McMahon both got dominated by Legacy’s dull offense for well over half the match. That lasted twenty minutes before Triple H finally tagged in. And then the goofy finish, where Triple H was distracted by Batista almost getting his team disqualified, was muddled by the timekeeper ringing the bell too early at 22:50. I could have dug that finish if it went off without a hitch, and if it led to Batista vs. Triple H. Neither of those things happened. Not good at all. **

June 7, 2009 – New Orleans, Louisiana

Batista def. Randy Orton {WWE Championship Steel Cage Match}
From the inaugural Extreme Rules. Hard to believe this is the first time the title changed hands in a steel cage. This was a rather run of the mill TV-level match until the great finish. Orton was ready to climb out of the cage but got cocky and came back in to punt Batista’s head. Batista avoided it and Orton tried to scramble away, only to be caught with the powerbomb at 7:03. Somewhere in here Batista must have gotten injured, because he vacated the title the next night and was out of action for some time. ***

June 15, 2009 – Charlotte, North Carolina

Randy Orton def. Triple H, John Cena, and the Big Show {WWE Championship Fatal Four Way Match}
Unlike JBL, Show was not the best part of this four way that he was copy-and-pasted into. WWE often does weird things when they’re reacting to a vacant title due to injury. Here they had the match for the title early in the show and then had a contenders battle royal later in the night to set up yet another in the excruciatingly long line of Triple H vs. Orton matches (which then transitioned into months of boring Orton vs. Cena matches). This was a fine match for Raw, but nothing that I’ll remember in three days. It did have a nice little finisher fest at the end, which is always appreciated in multi man matches. It was a really vanilla time for the title with Orton, Cena, and Triple H on top. Orton won at 8:23. ***

September 23, 2009 – Montreal, Quebec

John Cena def. Randy Orton {WWE Championship I Quit Match}
From Breaking Point. I’ve noticed that some modern I Quit Matches don’t have microphones, so I was relieved to see the referee pull one out of his back pocket here. This match is the wrestling equivalent to the Jesse Pinkman storyline in the final season of Breaking Bad. Cena got tortured for the majority of the thing, captured and restrained, only to finally escape and use his chains to defeat his captor. Sorry, spoilers. This match’s greatness owes a lot to the production, which framed multiple shots in the most dramatic and memorable way possible. Cena’s selling was also great. Orton quit at 16:46. ****

October 4, 2009 – Newark, New Jersey

Randy Orton def. John Cena {WWE Championship Hell in a Cell Match}
From the inaugural Hell in a Cell PPV. Saying that the cell in this match was more reinforced than in years past was less of a selling point for this match and more of an indictment of how watered down the stipulation had become. Beyond that and one or two cute spots using the ring steps, this was just a slow match that happened to be in the cell. Orton is one of the most boring main eventers of all time and his longevity at the top of the card is one of the reasons wrestling has faltered in the last decade and a half.  People who say he’s interesting are lying, deliberately deluding themselves, or focusing solely on his entertaining Twitter presence. He’s deathly dull with garbage pacing. Also, the final kick missed by a lot, right on camera, though the match mercifully ended at 21:24. Screw this match. **¼

October 25, 2009 – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

John Cena def. Randy Orton {WWE Championship Iron Man Match}
From Bragging Rights. This rivalry slowed down my progress on reviewing WWE Championship changes significantly. After the Hell in a Cell match it took me forever to get motivated to watch this hour. There were no disqualifications or count outs and falls counted anywhere, taking a ton of potential nuance out of the stipulation. Lucha Underground had similar rules for their All Night Long matches, but those were 25 minutes shorter than Iron Man matches and LU wasn’t afraid to get batshit crazy. I was zero percent shocked that this match featured a ton of chinlocks. Cena actually did a lot to try to keep things interesting, but Orton was such a snooze here. There was a cute use of the 30-second rest period here, as Orton hit the RKO while getting hit with the Attitude Adjustment leading to a double pin. So both guys got thirty seconds to rest, which made the score going up for both just shy of pointless and allowed doctors to stop Cena from bleeding. After that, everything felt all too sequential and predictable. That is, except for the bit where Orton tried to blow Cena up with pyro, a spot which ultimately came off as pretty damn lame and took forever. The match wasn’t outright dumb, but it got very, very boring in the second half. Orton started the running out the clock gimmick with TWENTY MINUTES remaining. People were needlessly worried that the 2000 Iron Man match would look like this, but I almost don’t want to bring that up because Orton doesn’t deserve to be mentioned in the same breath as Triple H and the Rock. The finish, which I’m sure was supposed to mirror Orton’s quick tap early on, came off like dogshit here. After an hour it makes no sense that Orton would tap with 15 seconds remaining. They should have had him pass out. They should have done so much differently. **½ 

December 13, 2009 – San Antonio, Texas

Sheamus def. John Cena {WWE Championship Tables Match}
From the inaugural TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs PPV. This was a plodding, punchy-kicky, boring brawl that gave Sheamus an incredibly anemic title win at 16:19. It only scores as high as it does because of a spot in which Sheamus panicked after getting hit by the Five Knuckle Shuffle and throwing a table out of the ring when he realized he was in trouble. But by and large, this did nothing to make Sheamus feel like a legit champion. His one successful title defense ended in a disqualification, and to this day he’s never really felt like a big deal. **½ 

February 21, 2010 – St. Louis, Missouri

John Cena def. Sheamus, Kofi Kingston, Randy Orton, Ted DiBiase Jr, and Triple H {WWE Championship Elimination Chamber Match}
From the inaugural Elimination Chamber PPV. Not having anyone eliminated for the first twenty minutes of the match was a mistake, as aside from a brief moment after Triple H came in and a brief moment after DiBiase came in there wasn’t a lot of excitement for the first two-thirds of the thing. After thatm things picked up with DiBiase turning on Orton, Triple H pinning the champ, and Cena going over Triple H really strong at 30:10. All in all it was a very middle of the road Elimination Chamber match. ***¼ 

Batista def. John Cena {WWE Championship Match}
Cena was the last person entered into the Chamber match, so it rang false when he started this match completely exhausted. I hated that they said that Cena had just survived a 45-minutes match when the match was 30 minutes long and Cena had only been in for ten of those minutes. This match was just a squash, and it wasn’t even a Money in the Bank cash-in. It was just Vince McMahon nonsense. Batista won in 32 seconds and the whole thing was kind of baffling as Cena winning at WrestleMania would have probably worked just fine whether he’d entered as champion or not. N/A

March 28, 2010 – Glendale, Arizona

John Cena def. Batista {WWE Championship Match}
From WrestleMania XXVI. Both guys have way better matches under their belt, but it was fun to see the two generational peers go at each other at WrestleMania. This reminded me a lot of Steve Austin’s retirement match, in that there was little nuance but they kept it fun by throwing supercharged finishers at each other. Cena won in 13:31. ***½ 

June 20, 2010 – Uniondale, New York

Sheamus def. John Cena, Edge, and Randy Orton {WWE Championship Fatal Four Way Match}
From Fatah 4-Way. The best moment in this match was before the opening bell rang, when all four guys looked like giant wrestling archetype gods. Then the action started and the crowd died and basically nothing interesting happened for fifteen minutes. It wasn’t embarrassingly bad (until the finish), but there was no narrative to the action, just a lot of hitting a move and standing around. There was also a touch of nonsensically getting into place for a convoluted spot. Throughout the match they showed random jobbers watching the match on a monitor, telegraphing that theyd be be attacked by the Nexus. Then the Nexus interfered and Sheamus just sneaks in and pins Cena at 17:25 before running into the crowd to escape Nexus. So the champion is a musclebound coward. That ending really turned this into a giant load of dung. *¾ 

September 19, 2010 – Rosemont, Illinois

Randy Orton def. Sheamus, Chris Jericho, Edge, John Cena, and Wade Barrett {WWE Championship Six Pack Challenge Match}
From the third Night of Champions. Whose coffee did Jericho piss in that got him eliminated in the first minutes of this match? This turned into the same lumbering nothing that the Fatal Four Way match was, with the only difference being Barrett joining the other four. It took forever to get to Edge’s elimination, but once he went out things picked up some. Nexus distracting and eliminating Cena worked better here than the way they ended the match three months earlier. It also led to a big pop for Orton eliminating Barrett and gave him momentum going into the title win at 21:28. ***

November 22, 2010 – Orlando, Florida

The Miz def. Randy Orton {WWE Championship Match}
Orton had been beaten up by Nexus earlier in the show and had just defended (thanks to John Cena) the title against Barrett. Miz (with Alex Riley) cashed in his Money in the Bank contract immediately after. Orton started the match on his feet, but Miz attacked his leg and countered the RKO to the Skull Crushing Finale for the title at 2:44. I’ve seen worse ultra-short title changes. At least there was the feeling that Orton might retain here. And there’s that little girl in the crowd who became a meme. This is definitely the most interesting Money in the Bank short-match cash-in. **

May 1, 2011 – Tampa, Florida

John Cena def. The Miz and John Morrison {WWE Championship Triple Threat Steel Cage Match}
From the third Extreme Rules. I’m not sure how the Miz survived getting hit with a double avalanche brainbuster and landing on his head. Morrison made a lot out of his only real PPV main event. Sadly, after he served his purpose of a few breathtaking spots here, R-Truth interfered and took him out of the match. It did benefit the match within the scope of the feud, as it allowed for Cena to beat Miz clean as a sheet with an avalanche Attitude Adjustment and put the pesky champion out of his misery at 16:50. It’s pretty wild that all these years later it’s only Cena that’s not still actively wrestling in WWE, while Miz, Truth and Morrison are all around. ***¾ 

Things were getting pretty stale with the same guys winning the title over and over and over again, but something spicy was about to freshen things up.