Road to Clash at the Castle

The wrestling internet is abuzz now that Triple H is in charge of WWE creative, and that buzzing has burrowed into my brain. I stopped watching WWE in any kind of serious way in 2010, and by 2013 I’d stopped watching wrestling altogether. Five years later, NXT got me interested in wrestling again, though I stopped watching that outside of title changes and big shows in late 2021. That was the height of Vince McMahon nonsense. But he’s gone now and there may be a sea change on TV. Cagematch ratings of WWE shows has shot up, so I want to see if I can confirm that the enthusiasm is based on actual quality or wishful thinking. The Smackdown before SummerSlam, Triple H’s first night at the wheel, saw an incredible match between Drew McIntyre and Sheamus. So I have some hope.

The deal here is, if a WWE TV match gets an 8.0 or above on Cagematch and maintains that rating for two weeks, I’ll review it. Posts will contain every TV match that meets the criteria between PPVs, and then the PPV itself. 

August 8, 2022 – Cleveland, Ohio

Bobby Lashley def. Ciampa {WWE United States Championship Match}
From Raw 1,124. Like I said, I’m way out of the loop; why is Ciampa wearing a Harley Race robe? Anyway, I’m now a little dubious about this project because while this match was solid, there was only one notable minute in it. After a perfectly fine but unspectacular two-thirds, Ciampa rammed a distracted Lashley into an exposed turnbuckle behind the ref’s back, then rammed him into a protected turnbuckle in front of the ref, and then laid all his body weight on top of Lashley to get a near fall. He got another near fall with Willow’s Bell and got Corey Graves to reference DIY when he put on an STF. Lashley came back with the Hurt Lock for the win at 9:38 (shown of 13:30). So this was good, but it didn’t elevate Ciampa (it didn’t make him look like a jobber either, so it’s a wash) and it wasn’t particularly memorable. To be fair to Cagematch users, at the time I’m reviewing this match it has the lowest 8.0+ rating of any of the matches in this post, at 8.02. So it was borderline anyway. ***

August 12, 2022 – Raleigh, North Carolina 

Gunther def. Shinsuke Nakamura {WWE Intercontinental Championship Match}
From Smackdown 1,199. This was more like it. Both guys were laying in their shots like this was serious business. Gunther dominated the first half of the match, so when Nakamura started a comeback thanks to a well-placed knee to the face, the fans came alive in a way that I didn’t think WWE fans really did anymore. Gunther’s left arm was screwed up, so he couldn’t really use the chop and had to rely on kicks. That worked out for him, as Nakamura got cocky and gloated in Ludwig Kaiser’s face after hitting a sliding German suplex on Gunther. Back in the ring, Gunther hit a dropkick, put on the sleeper hold, and then hit the powerbomb for the win at 10:21 (shown of 14:20). ***½ 

August 15, 2022 – Washington, D.C. 

Drew McIntyre def. Kevin Owens
From Raw 1,525. This made Owens look terrific, even though he couldn’t put McIntyre away. The finish was a bummer (the Usos came out and attacked McIntyre, drawing a DQ at 11:36 (shown of 15:58)), and given that Owens doesn’t appear to be in any immediate main event plans I don’t understand why he couldn’t lose here. McIntyre is being heated up for a title match at one of WWE’s biggest shows ever (the third most fans in attendance of any non-WrestleMania show), so you’d think they’d build him up monstrously. I’m not mad that Owens was left looking strong as a competitive match is much more interesting, I’m just kind of bewildered by the finish. The Usos couldn’t attack after McIntyre had won? ***½ 

August 19, 2022 – Montreal, Quebec 

Sheamus def. Happy Corbin, Madcap Moss, Ricochet, and Sami Zayn {Number One Contender Five Way Match}
From Smackdown 1,200. Winner gets a shot at Gunther’s Intercontinental Championship. Zayn gets a great pop from his hometown fans. Hearing them chant his name in their French-Canadian accents is cute. The entire match hinged on his presence in it, and through that lens it was fun. The crowd was dying for him to dominate and win, and the match made them wait long stretches without him so that the pops for him would be big. I dig it. The problem is that Ricochet is so dead in the water as a babyface at this point that when Zayn was gone, the crowd was silent. Zayn looked to be gaining momentum against Ricochet after a stint in the locker room checking up on a shoulder injury, but Corbin broke up a pin and then slammed Zayn into the post. Corbin paid for that when Sheamus hit him with a Brogue Kick for the win at 16:38 (shown of 22:33). This was, for a few days, the highest rated of the pre-Clash at the Castle TV matches by Cagematch users, but it’s about at the same level as the two matches that preceded it. I think people are just suckers for matches with no down time. Doesn’t really do it for me at that level. ***½ 

August 22, 2022 – Toronto, Ontario 

Kevin Owens def. Chad Gable
From Raw 1,526. This was fun, if very short. Gable got a lot of offense in, though Owens never felt like he was in much danger of losing. I’m surprised the Kurt Angle cameo the following week was done in such a one-off way given that Gable has now fully transformed himself into a pocket Angle. He hit at least half a dozen suplexes in this little match. Owens came back with the usual, and finished Gable off with a superkick and the pop-up powerbomb at 7:58 (shown of 11:10). ***¼  

Edge def. Damian Priest
Same show! This is Edge’s first singles match on TV in almost a year. Huge ovation for him in his hometown. They said that this would have limited commercial breaks, but there were two commercials during the match. I think that might have dampened my enjoyment of it a bit. It was a nice revenge story for Edge, who was able to take everything from the snotty traitor Priest and give it back to him an order of magnitude worse. Priest stole Edge’s move, so Edge stole Priest’s move and got closer to winning with it. Priest brought in chairs for the Conchairto, so Edge avoided that and broke off a piece of the chair and jammed it into Priest’s mouth. Ultimately, Edge got the win with a spear at 13:18 (shown of 19:35). The Judgment Day never wins big matches. ***½  

September 2, 2022 – Detroit, Michigan

Eric & Ivar def. Kofi Kingston & Xavier Woods {Viking Rules Tag Team Match}
From Smackdown 1,202. It’s a goofy street fight stipulation, with the ring surrounded by viking-themed stuff. Kind of  like the McIntyre vs. Sheamus match, but with Norse stuff instead of Irish stuff. The barricade LED screens play a video of rolling water. I like that, especially given that the ring is made to look like a viking longship. Also, falls count anywhere. In a cute twist, the New Day are dressed in Thor Ragnarok style gear. Woods does an Umaga to the Motor City Machine Guns, and the commentators dance around the hand gesture. Kofi breaking a unicorn horn-handled pink Mjolnir off of Eric’s head was a cool visual. This was dumb fun violence. Matches like this would benefit from a bit of blood, but also the weapons were all plywood and plastic so it might have felt forced. Either way, everyone seemed to be having a lot of fun and they beat one another up pretty good. The Viking Raiders hit Woods with the End of the World through two tables for the win at 16:08 (shown of 22:15). ***¾ 

On to Clash at the Castle. I thought this was the first WWE PPV I’d ever reviewed in full, but then I remembered I reviewed Evolution and Survivor Series 2019 because they both had a lot of NXT participation. I was more excited for this show than for any WWE PPV since 2005. Every match on the show except for the main event was a first time match (Matt Riddle vs. Seth Rollins had happened once on TV but shut up) and the build to each match was good! 

September 3, 2022 – Cardiff, Wales

Riddick Moss, Montez Ford & Angelo Dawkins def. Chad Gable, Otis & Austin Theory
From the kick off show. Moss is kind of over. I never would have guessed that would happen based on his NXT work. This was fine, just fine. It had flashes of being more than fine, but it wasn’t designed to be. Everyone got to shine for a bit before they set up a Doomsday Blockbuster spot on the floor. Ford followed that with a frog splash on Gable for the win at 6:29. **¾ 

Bayley, Iyo Sky & Dakota Kai def. Asuka, Alexa Bliss & Bianca Belair
Michael Cole casually talking about Asuka & Sky’s time as a team in Pro Wrestling WAVE is breaking my brain. This was very slow to start, and Bayley didn’t seem to know how to deal with the fans singing for her. They did pick up the pace, and the bits between Asuka and Sky made me kind of curious for a singles match between them. On the other hand, Sky was looking unsure of herself here so maybe it wouldn’t be as good as I think. The Belair vs. Bayley stuff near the end was also good. But a large chunk of the match was kind of clunky and they couldn’t keep the crowd into it consistently. The finish saw Bayley hit the Rose Plant and Sky hit the moonsault so Bayley could pin Belair at 18:45. They could have cut five minutes off of this thing easy. This was the first time Belair had been pinned in 2022. **¾ 

Gunther def. Sheamus {WWE Intercontinental Championship Match}
The commentators and ring announcer talk about Bret Hart’s Intercontinental Championship match against the British Bulldog from 30 years ago before introducing Hart in the crowd. Now, this was the matchup that, when I read it was happening, I texted my friends to meekly ask out loud if this WWE PPV might actually be good. But that said, comparing it to Hart vs. Bulldog before the match even begins is way too much pressure. Before the match, Kaiser introduces Giovanni Vinci and a reunited Imperium. Vinci and Kaiser brawl with Butch and Ridge Holland while Gunther and Sheamus stare at each other, remixing an amazing moment from Smackdown a week earlier. Pressure or no, this match rules. I didn’t think Gunther was going to be able to have this kind of match outside of NXT/UK. He spent half of the match beating up Sheamus in a way I’ve never seen Sheamus beaten up before. Sheamus got a few awesome crowd-fueled comebacks, but Gunther did his best to put distance between himself and the challenger whenever that happened. They beat the piss out of each other for quite a while longer, with Sheamus pulling out all the stops. But he couldn’t get off the Brogue Kick because his back gave out. Gunther rushed in with the powerbomb and a crazy lariat for the win at 19:33. They certainly lived up to the pressure that was put on the match. Without the benefit of hindsight or any chill at all, I’m calling this one of the top five Intercontinental Championship matches of all time. Sheamus gets a great ovation after the match. ****¾ 

Liv Morgan def. Shayna Baszler {WWE Smackdown Women’s Championship Match}
They claim that Morgan trained with Riddle to be able to handle Baszler’s style. I appreciate the backstory. I was surprised to hear Michael Cole say that this was the first singles match between these two as I thought i remembered Baszler squashing Morgan in NXT. But the only time that happened was on house shows, so I guess I imagined it. The crowd was very silent, being exhausted after the last match and also probably just not being that interested in such a one-sided women’s match. Morgan’s comebacks near the end get a good response. Morgan hit a face buster and the Oblivion kind of out of nowhere for the win at 11:02. I like that Morgan got to look more or less competent against Baszler, but I didn’t find that finish very convincing. **¾ 

Edge & Rey Mysterio def. Finn Balor & Damian Priest
To my mind, Edge & Mysterio are a legendary tag team, having been one side of one of the best tag team matches of all time at No Mercy 2002. They wrestled eight times as a team that year, and then didn’t team again until 2010. Three times they wrestled together against Alberto del Rio. Now, 12 years later, we get one lore look at the team and I’m here for it. Today I learned that Damian Priest has a movie named after a Christian Slater movie. The match starts and ends in exciting fashion, though my brain shut off a bit in the middle during the Judgment Day’s dull control segment. Dominik Mysterio got involved, interfering on behalf of his dad to help the good guys hit the 619 and the spear on Balor for the win at 12:35. After the match, Dominik’s interference is made to make no sense as he attacks Edge & Mysterio. I don’t understand how the Judgment Day is meant to get over when they lose every match. Saying that they always get the last laugh after the fact isn’t enough, and the crowd being dead when they were in control here is proof of that. ***

Seth Rollins def. Matt Riddle
People are going to talk about Rollins as a wrestler of the year candidate, right? Between this match and the trilogy against Cody Rhodes, this guy has to be considered beyond reliable. Inevitably he puts on incredible matches. The crowd was quite pro-Rollins. Riddle’s offense is so exciting, and this was an amazing showcase for that. And Rollins got through it by talking shit and getting Riddle to lose his cool. I liked that doing so wasn’t a sure-win for Rollins though, as he got too cute by imitating Randy Orton and almost lost the match as a result. But he got through that and caught Riddle with a Stomp and a diving Stomp for the win at 17:21. On top of the engaging and dramatic action, points to both guys for recovering really well from a mishap in when they were going for an inverted superplex and just moving on to something else rather than repeating the spot. ****½ 

Roman Reigns def. Drew McIntyre {Undisputed WWE Universal Championship Match}
The atmosphere for this match was amazing, and all set up for a raucous response when McIntyre won the title. Reigns was 4-0 over McIntyre going into this match. The commentators run down all of the opponents Reigns has beaten in his two year reign, that he’s 23-0, and that he hand the been pinned since 2019. McIntyre showed a strength advantage early. Seeing Reigns back off was such a feel good moment. I did not need the stain of Karrion Kross being a part of this match at all, but he stuck his nose in, providing a distraction from the front row and giving Reigns the advantage. That led to a slow control segment from Reigns. Things looked like they were going to pick back up, but then Reigns demanded a microphone. At least his shtick was short and led to him eating a headbutt, because Reigns talking during matches is my least favorite part of the Tribal Chief gimmick. Reigns hit a pair of spears (not close to each other) and I bought both of them as the finish. Austin Theory bummed me out by running out to cash in his MITB briefcase, but (known antisemitr) Tyson Fury attacked him and everyone was able to relax. McIntyre hit two Claymore kicks, both of which I thought would be the finish. But Reigns kicked out of the first one and Solo Sikoa made his main roster debut and pulled Reigns out of the ring to stop the second one. Reigns caught McIntyre with another spear for the win at 30:46. Well, that was heartbreaking. Built into a terrific match, but heartbreaking and ultimately a bummer. ****

After the match, Fury comes into the ring to have a bizarre singalong with McIntyre to send the crowd home happy. It’s awful and I can only imagine that it wasn’t meant to be seen by those of us watching at home. So bad.

The rest of the show was great though. I’ll do this again for Extreme Rules, and if that goes well I’ll do it again for Crown Jewel. And so on; I’ll do it until it’s not fun.