WWE ECW 66

September 11, 2007 – Minneapolis, Minnesota

Armando Estrada brings the new champion CM Punk to the ring to start the show. Estrada sucks up to Punk, but the champ sees through it. He gives Estrada a t-shirt, signs it, and insists Estrada try it on. Estrada does, and then introduces Elijah Burke as Punk’s opponent for a match this Sunday. Why didn’t they just wait two more weeks and have Punk win the ECW title on this yet-to-be-named-on-this-broadcast PPV? Or why not give John Morrison a rematch? This angle feels stapled together. Burke lets us know that the PPV is Unforgiven, then Punk hits him with an enziguiri. I don’t want to watch Punk vs. Burke part 6 at all.

The Miz def. Tommy Dreamer
Miz just had no idea how to move around the ring, and Dreamer sure as hell wasn’t the guy to drag a miracle out of him. On the brightside, this was pretty short. *¼

Kelly Kelly wasn’t as happy to celebrate Miz’s victory as the rest of her crew. In the back, Balls Mahoney gives her a teddy bear, but she stops short of giving him a smooch and leaves.

Matt Striker def. Nunzio
Striker won this thing in like 15 seconds with a roll up. Then Big Daddy V attacks Nunzio. Boogeyman shows up on the screen and says things at V. They’ll fight next week and then hopefully never again after that. N/A

Mike Knox def. Balls Mahoney
I was surprised that the commentators acknowledged Knox and Kelly’s former relationship, since this is the dude’s first time on TV in seven months. Miz distracted Mahoney after two minutes of uninteresting action, giving Knox the win. ¾*

CM Punk & Stevie Richards def. Kevin Thorn & Elijah Burke
This wasn’t the worst main event, given that at least it featured a pair of actual rivalries bonded together, that Richards was a good vulnerable babyface, and that Punk led the way through a fun final minute. **¼

And now we move onto this thrown together title match at Unforgiven.

September 16, 2007 – Memphis, Tennessee

CM Punk def. Elijah Burke {ECW Championship Match}
Burke didn’t really get an entrance, and the pre-match video was about Punk vs. Morrison, not Burke. It turns out Morrison had violated WWE’s drug policy and was suspended, and they just did a garbage job making us forget that it was really his spot in this match. As for the match, it wasn’t bad at all; it was definitely better than their last PPV match. I’ll hand it to Burke, he brought his best effort here. Punk also did a lot to make Burke look good, as he fought the whole match from behind and let the challenger shine. Weirdly, this was beginning of the end of Burke as a threat on the brand. **¾