History of the WWE Championship | Part 9 | Pipebomb

Last time we saw John Cena and Randy Orton win and lose the title over and over again for a couple years. That got boring. Now CM Punk is here to spice up the party with wild promos and stellar matches and make way for Daniel Bryan in the main event. 

July 17, 2011 – Rosemont, Illinois

CM Punk def. John Cena {WWE Championship Match}
From the second Money in the Bank. If this isn’t the most famous match of the ’10s, it’s in the top five. Cena and Punk, who were a heel and babyface respectively, played their roles perfectly here given that the Chicago crowd was almost entirely, and passionately, pro-Punk. Punk ate up the cheers while Cena simply stoically walked to the ring for his entrance. Crowd aside, Punk and Cena did an amazing job making every single move and hold feel important. It had serious Ric Flair vs. Ricky Steamboat vibes in that way. Cute sidenote: Colt Cabana was sitting in the front row, and on the other side of the ring a fan wearing a Cabana t-shirt makes eye contact with him and smiles at realizing he’s been seen by his guy. Also, Booker T on commentary admitting that the WWE Championship is so important that it’s the only one he couldn’t win, followed by Lawler being a little salty because he also never won it, those remarks made this feel bigger. Even when Punk came in too low on a crossbody, Cena sold the knee to incorporate the goof into the story of the match. The finish was terrific too, as Vince McMahon, who wanted to protect the title from the departing Punk (whose contract was up at midnight that night) and told John Laurenitus to screw Punk, wound up being more of a distraction for Cena than a help and led directly to Punk winning the title at 33:44. *****

July 25, 2011 – Hampton, Virginia

Rey Mysterio def. The Miz {WWE Championship Match}
From Raw 948. This was the finals of a tournament to crown a new champion because Punk left the company with the belt the week before. It’s the best one-on-one Miz match I’ve ever seen. This had good comebacks from Mysterio, a smart finish, and great bumping from both guys. Michael Cole was insufferable on commentary, talking more about what I assume was the competing presidential address on the economy than he should have, verbally fellating Vince McMahon (which Triple H also did when announcing Mysterio’s defense against John Cena later in the evening), and trying to get himself over at the expense of the match. Mysterio won at 10:14 shown of 13:17. Miz attacked Mysterio after the match and it looked like Alberto Del Rio would cash in his Money in the Bank contract. But Mysterio got his wits about him and attacked Del Rio, causing the briefcase-holder to bail. Sadly, that’s not the last we’d see of Del Rio and that briefcase. ***½ 

John Cena def. Rey Mysterio {WWE Championship Match}
From later on the same episode of Raw. Zack Ryder beat up Michael Cole earlier in the night, so he was thankfully replaced by Jim Ross here. This was a sneaky good match, one that I think has been slept on by most. Early on, Cena was in control. Mysterio started to make a comeback and Cena made the mistake of thinking that distance from his opponent would be in his favor, only to get knocked to the floor and attacked there. From there, Cena stayed in close, hitting a clothesline and then keeping full contact with Mysterio as much as he could. For his part, Mysterio would counter, back off, and strike. The final stretch was incredible, seeing both guys survive thanks to the mistakes of the other. Mysterio thought he could beat Cena with an STF, but Cena powered out. Cena tried to immediately counter to the Attitude Adjustment, but his leg gave out. Mysterio tried to Drop the Dime because it’s how he beat Miz, but Cena got his knees up. Mysterio went for the 619 one time too many and got caught with the Attitude Adjustment and lost at 12:53. It would have been very cool to see Mysterio win over Cena, but I understand the desire to put on a Money in the Bank rematch, which was set up after the match when Punk returned with the original belt. ****¼ 

August 14, 2011 – Los Angeles, California

CM Punk def. John Cena {WWE Championship Unification Match}
From the 24th SummerSlam. Jerry Lawler promotes Jenny McCarthy and her anti-vax group Generation Rescue before the match. WWE has always been gross. Triple H is the referee. For the most part he did a good job because I didn’t notice he was there for long stretches. The match was great, but didn’t meet the expectations set by their first match. Early on, there were a couple moments where the momentum of the match just stopped. But for the most part the action was great, as these two had amazing chemistry and got the crowd really riled up. Sadly, the finish wherein Triple H didn’t see that Cena’s foot was on the ropes felt really cheap. He counted the pin anyway at 24:14. ****

Alberto Del Rio def. CM Punk {WWE Championship Match}
Kevin Nash attacked Punk after the Cena match and then ran off into the crowd. Alberto Del Rio cashed in his Money in the Bank contract and pinned Punk almost immediately. The whole thing lasted five seconds. I think this was a terrible move, but I’d probably feel differently if it wasn’t boring ass Del Rio stealing the title.  A few days later, the WWE brand extension ended after nine years and the WWE Championship became the disputed top title on both brands, as it’s spot on the card was always made to seem more important than that of the World Heavyweight Championship. N/A

September 18, 2011 – Buffalo, New York

John Cena def. Alberto Del Rio {WWE Championship Match}
From the fourth Night of Champions. The crowd wasn’t about to get behind Cena and they didn’t care about Del Rio at all. That made this an eerily quiet affair. I was ready to say that this wasn’t bad but also wasn’t quite engaging, but after a while the silence made this match feel twice as long as it was. There was just nothing to it. Because the match had no ebbs or flows, Del Rio submitting at 17:26 completely lacked drama. **¼ 

October 2, 2011 – New Orleans, Louisiana

Alberto Del Rio def. John Cena and CM Punk {WWE Championship Triple Threat Hell in a Cell Match}
From the third Hell in a Cell. This was a hell of a lot better than the last time the title changed hands in the cell. Punk took a bunch of crazy bumps, the action was sufficiently frantic, and Del Rio’s treachery leading to the finish at 24:08 was creative and interesting. I have very mixed feelings about the post-match chaos because while the story of Miz and R-Truth being monstrous was interesting the execution was iffy at best. But from bell-to-bell this was a banger, even if the seams showed from time to time. ***¾ 

November 20, 2011 – New York, New York

CM Punk def. Alberto Del Rio {WWE Championship Match}
From the 25th annual Survivor Series. Punk channeled Sid here, winning the title at Survivor Series in Madison Square Garden. Del Rio channeled his boring self and almost put me to sleep here. There’s just nothing interesting about this dude in the ring. Thankfully, this was the last time he’d ever get his hands on the title. The finish was pretty hot, with good counters and nearfalls, and Punk struggling through eye gouging from Del Rio to keep on the Anaconda Vice for the win at 17:16. Booker T lies and says they wrestled for thirty minutes, but I’ll cut him a break because Del Rio does make it feel that way. **½ 

January 27, 2013 – Phoenix, Arizona

The Rock def. CM Punk {WWE Championship Match}
From the 26th Royal Rumble, Punk’s lengthy title reign finally comes to an end because a legend returns. There was a palpably amazing vibe when this match started but it faded along with the crowd heat as the match wore on. The action wasn’t that compelling and the match dragged more than once. The Shield interference was poorly done and felt like it was done to protect Punk. Vince McMahon coming out and admitting it’s stupid and lazy doesn’t make it less stupid and lazy. And did Punk need protecting? He’d just held the title longer than anyone in decades. It was serviceable and the crowd went wild for everything after the restart, but a hot finish is a trick to get you to think a match was great, not a great match in itself. Rock won at 23:17. ***

April 7, 2013 – East Rutherford, New Jersey

John Cena def. The Rock {WWE Championship Match}
From WrestleMania XXIX. I saw this match live and it made absolutely no impression on me, to the point that when I came to this match on the list I’d forgotten that I’d seen it. To be fair though, all I remember from being there was Punk vs. Undertaker, that Team Hell No had a match, and the finish of Triple H vs. Lesnar. The crowd was basically silent for most of it. Let that sink in; a match between two of the biggest names in wrestling history in the main event of WrestleMania in New York City (well, adjacent) elicited almost no crowd reaction. That has to be considered one of the biggest wrestling failures I can think of. This was structured like the Austin vs. Rock match at WrestleMania XIX but with less fan interest and with both guys treating their own finishers like transition moves. I liked Cena baiting the Rock with the fake People’s Elbow, which I guess played off their match from the year before. It worked even without having ever seen that match (yes I’ve never and probably will never see the WrestleMania XXVIII main event). Anyway, the rest of the match was an unseasoned potato. Cena won at 23:59. **½ 

August 18, 2013 – Los Angeles, California

Daniel Bryan def. John Cena {WWE Championship Match}
From the 26th SummerSlam. Once again, special referee Triple H is great at his job as I forget that he’s in the ring almost the entire match. And what a match it is. Cena gave up a ton to Bryan, trying to match him at the submission game and getting his ass handed to him for it. Watching Cena fighting from behind for so long was kind of wild, and his comebacks were excellent thanks to Bryan’s selling. I especially loved the finish, where Cena screwed himself by getting frustrated, thinking the Attitude Adjustment would finally put Bryan away even though it was clear Bryan had a million answers for that move, and then losing moments later at 26:53. This is how you pass the torch. *****

Randy Orton def. Daniel Bryan {WWE Championship Match}
After his title win, Bryan was attacked by special referee Triple H, leading immediately to Randy Orton coming out and winning the title in nine seconds thanks to Money in the Bank. I’m not a fan at all of these super short title changes, but in hindsight this one led to an eight-month feud that ended with Bryan beating Triple H and then also Orton in the main event at WrestleMania, so it’s easy to forgive. N/A

September 15, 2013 – Detroit, Michigan

Daniel Bryan def. Randy Orton {WWE Championship Match}
From the sixth Night of Champions. I like that right off the bat, the crowd was in Orton’s head. But while it was fun to see Bryan fight in a traditional heel/face main event, this lost steam more than once. It was a serviceable main event, but the nonsense with the two referees leading to Bryan’s being stripped of the title the following night was weird and the fast count to finish at 17:40 was bizarre, even in hindsight. ***¼ 

October 27, 2013 – Miami, Florida

Randy Orton def. Daniel Bryan {WWE Championship Hell in a Cell Match}
From the fifth Hell in a Cell. Has Orton ever had a great match in the cell? He brings such a plodding pace to these things. I got nothing out of this that I didn’t get from the Night of Champions match, and while the finish was more chaotic and less weird, it wasn’t more compelling. WWE legend Shawn Michaels, as a guest referee, selling a minor bump like a typical faceless ref would have is also insane. And let’s be real, without the gore there’s almost no reason for the Hell in a Cell stipulation to exist without a lot of creativity. This didn’t have much creativity. Michaels superkicked Bryan because he was mad that Bryan attacked an interfering Triple H, giving Orton the win at 22:17. **¾ 

April 6, 2014 – New Orleans, Louisiana

Daniel Bryan def. Randy Orton and Batista {WWE World Heavyweight Championship Triple Threat Match}
From WrestleMania XXX. Orton unified the WWE Championship with the World Heavyweight Championship in December, so they combined the names and followed this title’s lineage. Good move. Also between the last match and this one, Batista won the Royal Rumble, and Daniel Bryan beat Triple H earlier on this night leading to the three of them meeting here. Bryan was also attacked by Triple H after their match, injuring his shoulder. I liked the symmetry between this and the WrestleMania XX main event. I didn’t like the Batista vs. Orton moments, which the crowd was silent for. It took Triple H coming out with his crooked referee to get the crowd into the action. The table spot was cool, but why afterwards did Batista stand around forever before pressing the action? And while I get what they were going for in putting Bryan on a stretcher, it stopped the match for like five full minutes. This problem would come up again when Roman Reigns attempted to defend his title in the Royal Rumble a couple years later. It was cool to see the crowd cheer for Orton and Batista kicking out of each other’s finishers because it meant Bryan could still win, but it wasn’t cool enough for me to think this match wasn’t overrated because of people’s emotions at the time. Bryan got his big win at 23:21. ***½ 

Unfortunately, finally pulling the trigger Bryan went head to head with nature and Bryan was forced to retire (thankfully temporarily) a couple months later. So to fill the gap left by him and a departing CM Punk, WWE threw their weight behind new sensations the Shield.